NMJ
The Proteins
ATP is involved
Measuring Stimuli
Activities By Muscles
100

The neurotransmitter released by the neuron

What is Acetylcholine?

100

The thin filament

What is Actin?

100

The location where cells produce ATP

What is the Mitochondria?

100

A single action potential and firing of a muscle cell

What is a Twitch?

100

A contraction that easily changes muscle length, easy to repeat

What is an Isotonic Contraction?
200

The ion that is representative of electricity on the muscle cell

What is Na+?

200

The thick filament

What is Myosin?

200

The normal way by which cells want to produce ATP

What is Aerobic Cellular Respiration?

200

Many firings of a muscle cell (not allowing any relaxation)

What is Tetanus?

200

A set of muscle contractions where a pair of muscles shorten and lengthen simultaneously to move a body part 

What are Concentric and Eccentric Contractions?
300

The enzyme that breaks down the neurotransmitter in the NMJ

What is Ach-ase?

300

The protein that covers the active sites of the thin filament

What is Tropomyosin?

300

The molecule that holds excess Phosphates for later use and the molecule that holds excess Oxygen for later use in muscle cells

What are Creatine and Myoglobin?

300

Many firings of a muscle cell (allowing slight relaxion)

What are Summation, Treppe, or Incomplete Tetanus?
300

A very difficult muscle contraction where the muscle barely changes length or doesn't change in length at all

What is an Isometric Contraction?

400

The end result of Botox injections 

How is Ach blocked resulting temporary muscle paralysis?
400

The protein that anchors the thick filaments within the Sarcomere.  This protein is also the median line of a Sarcomere.

What is Myomesin?

400

The molecule produced during anaerobic time periods by muscle cells when they break down glucose

What is Lactic Acid?

400

The period of time whereby a muscle can not receive another signal

What is the Refractory Period?

400

The other functions of skeletal muscles other than moving the limbs 

What are posture control, heat production (shivering or otherwise), and joint stabilization?

500

The special name for the muscle cell's membrane, and the indents that are evenly spaced along it

What is the Sarcolemma and what are the Transverse T Tubules?

500

In order to build a lot of proteins, you need a lot of these two organelles.

What are the nuclei and ribosomes?
500

The condition by which muscle cells can no longer make more ATP, but they receive a mild amount of Ca2+, therefore they contract, yet they can't stop contracting until the proteins degrade

What is Rigor Mortis?

500

The period of time wherein a muscle cell has received a stimulus yet has not fired yet.

What is the Latent Period?

500

Gradients of ions are constantly created by these (such as Ca2+ in the SR or Na+ on the Sarcolemma)

What are pumps and co transport mechanisms?