filamentous
(adjective)
Having the form of threads or filaments
Examples of filamentous in the following topics:
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Sliding Filament Model of Contraction
- In the sliding filament model, the thick and thin filaments pass each other, shortening the sarcomere.
- The sliding filament theory describes the process used by muscles to contract.
- To understand the sliding filament model and understanding of sarcomere structure is first required.
- An alternative description is the region spanned by the titin molecule connecting the Z-line with a myosin filament.
- At the level of the sliding filament model expansion and contraction only occurs within the I and H-bands, the myofilaments themselves do not contract or expand and so the A-band remains constant.
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Intermediate Filaments and Microtubules
- Microtubules, along with microfilaments and intermediate filaments, come under the class of organelles known as the cytoskeleton.
- Intermediate filaments (IFs) are cytoskeletal components found in animal cells.
- Intermediate filaments contribute to cellular structural elements and are often crucial in holding together tissues like skin .
- Keratin cytoskeletal intermediate filaments are concentrated around the edge of the cells and merge into the surface membrane.
- This network of intermediate filaments from cell to cell holds together tissues like skin.
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Skeletal Muscle Fibers
- Within the sarcomere actin and myosin myofilaments are interlaced with each other and via the sliding filament model of contraction slide over each other.
- There are two main types of filaments: thick filaments and thin filaments.
- Thick filaments occur are composed predominately of myosin proteins, the tails of which bind together leaving the heads exposed to the interlaced thin filaments.
- Thin filaments are composed predominately of actin, tropomyosin, and troponin.
- The sarcomere is the functional contractile region of the myocyte, and defines the region of interaction between a set of thick and thin filaments.
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Control of Muscle Tension
- Cross-bridges can only form where thick and thin filaments overlap, allowing myosin to bind to actin.
- Maximal tension occurs when thick and thin filaments overlap to the greatest degree within a sarcomere.
- If a sarcomere at rest is stretched past an ideal resting length, thick and thin filaments do not overlap to the greatest degree so fewer cross-bridges can form.
- As a sarcomere shortens, the zone of overlap reduces as the thin filaments reach the H zone, which is composed of myosin tails.
- Conversely, if the sarcomere is stretched to the point at which thick and thin filaments do not overlap at all, no cross-bridges are formed and no tension is produced.
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Microfilaments
- There are three types of fibers within the cytoskeleton: microfilaments, intermediate filaments, and microtubules.
- For this reason, microfilaments are also known as actin filaments.
- Actin is powered by ATP to assemble its filamentous form, which serves as a track for the movement of a motor protein called myosin.
- When your actin and myosin filaments slide past each other, your muscles contract.
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Angiosperm Flowers
- Stamens are composed of a thin stalk called a filament and a sac-like structure called the anther.
- The filament supports the anther, where the microspores are produced by meiosis and develop into pollen grains .
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Viral Morphology
- In general, the shapes of viruses are classified into four groups: filamentous, isometric (or icosahedral), enveloped, and head and tail.
- Filamentous viruses are long and cylindrical.
- Many plant viruses are filamentous, including TMV (tobacco mosaic virus).
- They have a head that is similar to icosahedral viruses and a tail shape like filamentous viruses.
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Intercellular Junctions
- Short proteins called cadherins in the plasma membrane connect to intermediate filaments to create desmosomes.
- It is created by the linkage of cadherins and intermediate filaments.
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The Mitotic Phase and the G0 Phase
- A contractile ring composed of actin filaments forms just inside the plasma membrane at the former metaphase plate.
- The actin filaments pull the equator of the cell inward, forming a fissure.
- During cytokinesis in animal cells, a ring of actin filaments forms at the metaphase plate.
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ATP and Muscle Contraction
- As myosin expends the energy, it moves through the "power stroke," pulling the actin filament toward the M-line.