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Smooth Muscle Physiology

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Smooth Muscle: Structure & Types - Not So Simple!

  • Structure:
    • Spindle-shaped (fusiform) cells, single central nucleus.
    • No striations: actin & myosin arranged obliquely.
    • Dense bodies (anchor actin) & intermediate filaments (desmin, vimentin).
    • Caveolae (rudimentary T-tubules); poorly developed Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR).
    • Lacks troponin; uses calmodulin for $Ca^{2+}$ binding. Smooth Muscle Histology
  • Types:
    • Unitary (Visceral/Single-unit):
      • Cells coupled by gap junctions (syncytium).
      • Spontaneous pacemaker activity; stretch-sensitive.
      • Location: Gastrointestinal Tract (GIT), uterus, bladder, small vessels.
    • Multi-unit:
      • Each cell individually innervated; no/few gap junctions.
      • Fine, graded contractions; no spontaneous activity.
      • Location: Iris, ciliary muscle, piloerectors, large airways/arteries.

⭐ Smooth muscle contraction is regulated by calcium binding to calmodulin, not troponin.

Smooth Muscle Contraction: Mechanism - The Calcium Dance

  • Initiation: ↑ cytosolic $Ca^{2+}$.
    • Sources: ECF (L-type $Ca^{2+}$ channels, ligand-gated channels) & SR (IP3-receptors).
  • $Ca^{2+}$ Binding: $Ca^{2+}$ binds Calmodulin (CaM). (No troponin complex).
  • MLCK Activation: $Ca^{2+}$-CaM complex activates Myosin Light Chain Kinase (MLCK).
    • 📌 CaMels Make Lovely Contractions (Calmodulin, MLCK, Myosin Light Chain).
  • Myosin Phosphorylation: MLCK phosphorylates myosin light chains (MLC).
    • This enables myosin heads to bind actin & ↑ ATPase activity.
  • Cross-bridge Cycling: Actin-myosin interaction → contraction. Slow, sustained, energy-efficient.
  • Relaxation: ↓ cytosolic $Ca^{2+}$ (pumps); Myosin Light Chain Phosphatase (MLCP) dephosphorylates MLC.

⭐ Key feature: Latch-bridge mechanism. Myosin dephosphorylation by MLCP while attached to actin allows sustained contraction with low ATP use.

Smooth Muscle Contraction and Relaxation Pathway

Smooth Muscle Regulation: Control - Who's the Boss?

  • Neural Control (ANS):
    • Sympathetic (e.g., Norepinephrine via adrenergic receptors) & Parasympathetic (e.g., Acetylcholine via muscarinic receptors).
    • Neurotransmitters released from varicosities into diffuse junctions.
    • Response can be excitatory or inhibitory, receptor-dependent.
  • Hormonal Control:
    • Circulating hormones: Angiotensin II, Vasopressin, Oxytocin, Epinephrine, Histamine.
    • Bind to specific membrane receptors (often G-protein coupled).
  • Local Factors (Paracrine & Myogenic):
    • Paracrine signals: Nitric Oxide (NO), prostaglandins, histamine, endothelin.
    • Local chemical changes: ↓$O_2$, ↑$CO_2$, ↓pH, ↑K+.
    • Stretch-induced contraction (myogenic response).
    • Pharmacomechanical coupling: Contraction/relaxation without significant membrane potential change. Autonomic Innervation of Muscle Types

⭐ Many smooth muscles exhibit spontaneous electrical activity (slow waves, pacemaker potentials) leading to myogenic tone, an intrinsic control mechanism.

Smooth Muscle Electrophysiology: Potentials - Electrical Vibes

  • Resting Membrane Potential (RMP): Unstable, typically -50 to -60 mV.
    • Influenced by Na⁺/K⁺ pump & ion channel activity.
  • Action Potentials (APs):
    • Spike potentials: Rapid depolarization/repolarization (unitary smooth muscle).
    • APs with plateaus: Prolonged contraction (e.g., ureter, uterus); due to sustained Ca²⁺ influx.
    • Slow waves (pacemaker waves): Rhythmic, spontaneous depolarizations; can trigger APs if threshold is met.
  • Ionic Basis:
    • Depolarization: Mainly Ca²⁺ influx (L-type Ca²⁺ channels), less Na⁺.
    • Repolarization: K⁺ efflux. GI smooth muscle activity and action potentials

⭐ Interstitial Cells of Cajal (ICC) are the pacemakers generating slow waves in GI smooth muscle, not the smooth muscle cells themselves.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Unitary smooth muscle: gap junctions for syncytial action; Multiunit: fine, independent control.
  • Calmodulin is the key Ca²⁺-binding protein (troponin absent), initiating contraction.
  • Contraction requires Myosin Light Chain Kinase (MLCK) activation by Ca²⁺-calmodulin, leading to myosin phosphorylation.
  • The latch-bridge mechanism enables sustained tonic contraction with low ATP consumption.
  • Characterized by slow, prolonged contractions, the stress-relaxation response, and significant plasticity.
  • Regulated by ANS, hormones, and local chemical signals.

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