Outline
350 likes | 602 Vues
Outline. Diversity of Skeletons Hydrostatic Skeleton Exoskeletons Endoskeletons Human Skeletal System Axial Skeleton Appendicular Skeleton Human Muscular System The Muscles Muscle Contraction. Hydrostatic Skeleton. Functions Supports body form
Outline
E N D
Presentation Transcript
Outline • Diversity of Skeletons • Hydrostatic Skeleton • Exoskeletons • Endoskeletons • Human Skeletal System • Axial Skeleton • Appendicular Skeleton • Human Muscular System • The Muscles • Muscle Contraction
Hydrostatic Skeleton • Functions • Supports body form • Provides resistance for the contraction of muscles to act against • Source • Some organisms use their fluid-filled gastrovascular cavity • Others use their fluid-filled coelom
Exoskeletons and Endoskeletons • Exoskeleton - External Skeleton • Molluscs - composed of calcium carbonate • Arthropods - composed of chitin • Endoskeleton - Internal Skeleton • Echinoderms and vertebrates • Mineralized bone and cartilage • Grows as the animal grows • Does not limit space for internal organs • Supports greater weight
Human Skeletal System • Functions • Supports and protects the body • Permits movement • Provides resistive foundation for muscles to act against • Bones store calcium and phosphate ions • Certain bones produce red blood cells
Bone Growth and Renewal • Cartilage structures in early development act as models for future bones • Calcium salts deposited in matrix by cartilage cells and later by osteoblasts • Endochondral ossification • Osteoclasts • Break down bone • Remove worn cells • Deposit calcium in the blood • Work with osteoblasts to heal broken bones
Anatomy of a Long Bone • Gross • Main shank • Thick outer cylinder of compact bone • Medullary cavity in center • Spongy bone at ends • Details • Compact bone • Unit of structure called osteon • Concentric lamellae arranged around central canal • Osteocytes lie in lacunae at lamellar boundaries • Spongy bone • Numerous bars and plates separated by irregular spaces • Spaces filled with red bone marrow
The Axial Skeleton • Lies in the midline of the body • Consists of • The skull • The vertebral column • The sternum, and • The ribs
The Skull • Formed by cranium and facial bones • Major bones are named after • The lobes of the brain, and • The facial bones • Foramen magnum • Opening at base of skull • Where spinal cord connects to brain • Bones of cranium surround sinuses
Vertebral Column • Vertebral column • Supports the head and trunk • Protects the spinal cord and roots of spinal nerves • Segments (from superior to inferior) • Cervical - Neck • Thoracic - Thorax • Lumbar - Small of back • Sacral - Sacrum • Coccyx - Tailbone • Intervertebral disks of fibrocartilage act as padding
Rib Cage • Protects the heart and lungs, and assists breathing • Support by the thoracic vertebrae • Twelve pairs of ribs • True ribs • Connect directly to sternum • Seven pairs • “False” ribs • Do not connect directly to sternum • Five pairs
The Appendicular Skeleton • Consists of • The bones within the pectoral and pelvic girdles • The attached limbs • Pectoral girdle – Bones of the shoulder • Anterior • Supports the arms and hands • Pelvic girdle - Bones of the pelvis • Posterior • Supports the legs and feet
Classification of Joints • Fibrous Joints • Immovable • Between cranial bones • Cartilaginous Joints • Slightly Movable • Between vertebrae • Synovial Joints • Freely Movable • Bones separated by a cavity • Ligaments bind bones together at joint
Human Muscular System • Skeletal muscles • Attached to the skeleton by cable-like fibrous connective tissue called tendons • Arranged in antagonistic pairs • Can only contract, cannot push • When one muscle contracts, it stretches its antagonistic partner • A muscle at “rest” exhibits tone (minimal contraction) • A muscle in tetany is at maximum sustained contraction
Microscopic Anatomy and Physiology • Sarcolemma • Plasma membrane • Sarcoplasmic Reticulum • Modified endoplasmic reticulum • Myofibrils • Contractile structures in sarcoplasm • Sarcomeres • Units of contraction • Consist primarily of proteins • Myosin • Actin
Sliding Filament Model • Actin filaments at both ends of sarcomere • One end of each filament attached to a Z-plate at one end of the sarcomere • Other end suspended in sarcoplasm • Myosin filaments suspended in between Z-plates • Myosin filaments contain cross-bridges which pull the actin filaments inward • Causes Z-plates to move toward each other • Shortens sarcomere • Sarcomeres stacked together in series and cause myofiber to shorten • Working muscles require ATP • Myosin breaks down ATP • Sustained exercise • Requires cellular respiration • Regenerates ATP
Muscle Innervation • Neuromuscular junction • The synaptic contact between a nerve fiber and a muscle fiber • Nerve impulses bring about the release of a neurotransmitter that cross the synaptic cleft • Signals the muscle fiber to contract
Review • Diversity of Skeletons • Hydrostatic Skeleton • Exoskeletons • Endoskeletons • Human Skeletal System • Axial Skeleton • Appendicular Skeleton • Human Muscular System • The Muscles • Muscle Contraction