PHYSIOLOGY
MUSCLE CONTRACTION
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
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glucose
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glycogen
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ATP
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the Na+/K+ pump
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Detailed explanation-1: -Once the myosin-binding sites are exposed, and if sufficient ATP is present, myosin binds to actin to begin cross-bridge cycling. Then the sarcomere shortens and the muscle contracts. In the absence of calcium, this binding does not occur, so the presence of free calcium is an important regulator of muscle contraction.
Detailed explanation-2: -ATP first binds to myosin, moving it to a high-energy state. The ATP is hydrolyzed into ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi) by the enzyme ATPase. The energy released during ATP hydrolysis changes the angle of the myosin head into a “cocked” position, ready to bind to actin if the sites are available.
Detailed explanation-3: -It is accepted that a myosin molecule has ATPase activity and ATP hydrolysis is essential for a myosin head to slide on an actin filament10.
Detailed explanation-4: -Myosin binds to actin at a binding site on the globular actin protein. Myosin has another binding site for ATP at which enzymatic activity hydrolyzes ATP to ADP, releasing an inorganic phosphate molecule and energy. ATP binding causes myosin to release actin, allowing actin and myosin to detach from each other.