Definitions [1]
Definition: Locomotion
Locomotion is the voluntary movement of an individual from one place to another.
Key Points
Key Points: Introduction of Locomotion and Movement
- Locomotion is the movement of a living being from one place to another (e.g., walking, running, swimming).
- All locomotion is movement, but not all movements are locomotion (e.g., blinking or moving limbs without changing place).
- Movement is a basic feature of living organisms, seen in both plants and animals (e.g., Amoeba shows protoplasmic streaming).
- Different organisms use different structures for movement, like cilia, flagella, tentacles, and limbs.
- The purpose of locomotion includes finding food, shelter, mates, suitable conditions, and escaping predators.
Key Points: Types of Movement
- Human body cells show three types of movements: Amoeboid, Ciliary, and Muscular.
- Amoeboid movement - caused by pseudopodia; involves microfilaments; seen in leucocytes and macrophages.
- Ciliary movement - occurs in organs lined by ciliated epithelium; removes dust in the trachea; moves ova in the fallopian tube.
- Muscular movement - due to the contractile property of muscles; seen in jaws, limbs, eyelids, alimentary canal, and ureters.
- Muscular movement is used for locomotion and other movements in humans and most multicellular organisms.
- Locomotion requires coordinated activity of muscular, skeletal, and neural systems.
Key Points: Muscles
- Muscles are specialised tissues of mesodermal origin and contribute to 40–50% of an adult human's body weight.
- Muscles have four properties - Excitability, Contractility, Extensibility, and Elasticity.
- Skeletal muscles — associated with the skeletal system; striated (light & dark bands); voluntary; responsible for locomotion and body posture changes.
- Visceral muscles — form the inner walls of internal organs; non-striated; involuntary; assist in the movement of food through the digestive tract and gametes.
- Cardiac muscles - found only in the heart; striated with a branching pattern; involuntary in action.
Comparison Between Skeletal, Visceral And Cardiac Muscles
| Description | Skeletal Muscles | Visceral Muscles | Cardiac Muscles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Location | Associated with skeletal components | Located in the inner walls of hollow organs | Found in the heart |
| Appearance | Striped (striated) | Smooth (non-striated) | Striated |
| Control | Voluntary | Involuntary | Involuntary |
| Function | Involved in locomotion and posture changes | Assist in transporting food and gametes | Contraction of the heart |
| Representative Image | Skeletal muscle | Smooth muscle | Cardiac muscle |
Key Points: Skeletal Muscle (Voluntary Muscle)
- Skeletal muscle is made up of muscle bundles (fascicles) held together by fascia (collagenous connective tissue). Each bundle contains many muscle fibres.
- Each muscle fibre is lined by sarcolemma, contains sarcoplasm, is a syncytium (many nuclei), and the sarcoplasmic reticulum stores calcium ions.
- Muscle fibres contain myofibrils with alternate light and dark bands due to actin and myosin proteins.
- I-band - light, contains thin actin filaments. A-band - dark, contains thick myosin filaments.
- 'Z' line - bisects each I-band; thin filaments are attached to it. 'M' line - in the middle of the A-band; holds thick filaments together.
- Sarcomere - region between two successive 'Z' lines; functional unit of contraction.
- In the resting state, thin filaments partially overlap thick filaments; the non-overlapped part of the thick filament is the 'H' zone.
Key Points: Structure of Contractile Proteins
- Each thin filament (actin) is made of two 'F' (Filamentous) actins helically wound together. Each 'F' actin is a polymer of monomeric 'G' (Globular) actins.
- Two tropomyosin filaments run alongside 'F' actins. Troponin proteins are distributed at regular intervals on tropomyosin.
- In the resting state, a troponin subunit masks the active binding sites for myosin on actin filaments.
- Each thick filament (myosin) is made of many monomeric proteins called meromyosins. Each meromyosin has a globular head, short arm, and tail.
- Meromyosin is of two types - HMM (Heavy Meromyosin) - the globular head + short arm, and LMM (Light Meromyosin) - the tail.
- The globular head (HMM) projects outward, forming a cross arm. It acts as an active ATPase enzyme and has binding sites for both ATP and actin.
Key Points: Mechanism of Muscle Contraction
- Muscle contraction follows the sliding filament theory, where thin (actin) filaments slide over thick (myosin) filaments.
- Contraction begins with a signal from the CNS through a motor neuron; the neuron and muscle fibres together form a motor unit.
- The neuromuscular junction (motor-end plate) is the point where the motor neuron connects to the muscle fibre.
- Acetylcholine is released, which generates an action potential and causes the release of Ca²⁺ from the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
- Calcium ions activate actin, allowing myosin heads to bind and form cross-bridges.
- Cross bridges pull actin filaments, causing sliding, shortening of the sarcomere, and muscle contraction (I-band shortens, A-band remains the same).
- ATP helps in breaking and reforming cross-bridges; when Ca²⁺ is pumped back, the muscle relaxes.
Key Points: Skeletal System
- The skeletal system consists of bones and cartilage and provides shape and support to the body.
- It plays an important role in movement, along with the muscular system (e.g., jaw for chewing, limbs for walking).
- Bones are hard due to calcium salts, while cartilage is flexible due to chondroitin salts.
- Humans have 206 bones in adulthood, while a newborn has about 300 bones that fuse during growth.
- The skeletal system is divided into two parts: the axial skeleton and the appendicular skeleton.
Key Points: Axial Skeleton
- The axial skeleton has 80 bones and forms the main axis of the body (head and trunk).
- It includes the skull, vertebral column, ribs and sternum.
- Skull has 22 bones → 8 cranial (protect the brain) and 14 facial (form the face); also includes the hyoid bone and ear ossicles (malleus, incus, stapes).
- The vertebral column has 26 vertebrae and protects the spinal cord; the first vertebra is the atlas.
- The vertebral column is divided into cervical (7), thoracic (12), lumbar (5), sacral (1 fused) and coccygeal (1 fused) regions.
- Ribs are 12 pairs → 7 true ribs, 3 false ribs, and 2 floating ribs.
- The rib cage (ribs + sternum + thoracic vertebrae) protects vital organs like the heart and lungs.
Key Points: Appendicular Skeleton
- The appendicular skeleton includes bones of the limbs and their girdles. Each limb has 30 bones.
- Upper limb - Humerus, Radius, Ulna, 8 Carpals, 5 Metacarpals, 14 Phalanges.
- Lower limb - Femur, Patella (kneecap), Tibia, Fibula, 7 Tarsals, 5 Metatarsals, 14 Phalanges.
- Pectoral girdle - Clavicle + Scapula; glenoid cavity of scapula articulates with humerus → shoulder joint.
- Pelvic girdle - two coxal bones, each formed by fusion of ilium + ischium + pubis; the acetabulum articulates with the femur.
- The two pelvic halves are joined by the pubic symphysis (fibrous cartilage).
Key Points: Joints and Its Classification
- Joints connect bones and help in body movement.
- They act as points of contact between bones or between bone and cartilage.
- Muscles act on joints like a fulcrum to produce movement.
- Joints are of three types: fibrous, cartilaginous and synovial.
- Fibrous joints → no movement (e.g., skull sutures).
- Cartilaginous joints → limited movement (e.g., between vertebrae).
- Synovial joints → free movement (e.g., ball & socket, hinge, pivot).
Key Points: Disorders of Muscular and Skeletal System
- Myasthenia gravis - an autoimmune disorder affecting the neuromuscular junction; causes fatigue, weakness, and paralysis of skeletal muscles.
- Muscular dystrophy - progressive degeneration of skeletal muscles; mainly caused by a genetic disorder.
- Tetany - rapid spasms/wild contractions in muscles due to low Ca²⁺ (calcium) levels in body fluids.
- Arthritis - inflammation of joints causing pain and stiffness.
- Osteoporosis - an age-related disorder; decreased bone mass and increased risk of fractures; caused by a decrease in oestrogen levels.
- Gout - inflammation of joints due to the accumulation of uric acid crystals; causes intense pain and swelling.
Concepts [12]
- Introduction of Locomotion and Movement
- Types of Movement
- Muscles
- Comparison Between Skeletal, Visceral And Cardiac Muscles
- Skeletal Muscle (Voluntary Muscle)
- Structure of Contractile Proteins
- Mechanism of Muscle Contraction
- Skeletal System
- The Human Skeleton: Axial Skeleton
- The Human Skeleton: Appendicular Skeleton
- Joints and Its Classification
- Disorders of Muscular and Skeletal System
