Which steps involved in the contraction of a skeletal muscle require binding and/or hydrolysis of ATP?
Answer: I, III, and VI only
Explanation: Dissociation of the myosin head from the actin filament requires the binding of ATP (I). Attachment of the myosin head to the actin filament requires calcium and a troponin/tropomyosin shift (II). The conformational changes that move actin and myosin relative to one another require that ATP be hydrolyzed, for these changes occur upon release of the products of hydrolysis (ADP and Pi) by the myosin head (III). Binding of troponin to actin does not require the hydrolysis of ATP (IV). Release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum also does not require ATP hydrolysis. This release occurs when calcium ions move via voltage-gated ion channels down their concentration gradient (V). The reuptake of calcium into the sarcoplasmic reticulum occurs via an ATP-hydrolyzing pump that moves calcium against its concentration gradient (VI). Thus, C is the correct response.
How does III require binding and/or hydrolysis of ATP? I'm guessing the "Conformational change that moves actin and myosin filaments relative to one another" refers to the power stroke step, but according to the diagram below and in the answer explanation, ATP binding nor hydrolysis is needed during power stroke. The only thing that happens in this step is that already hydrolyzed ADP and Pi is released, How is this statement correct? How does the release of already hydrolyzed ADP and Pi qualify as "requiring binding and/or hydrolysis of ATP"?
PS I hope I labeled the title correctly, I've tried contacting modulators about making new threads to discuss the new AAMC practice materials but haven't gotten a response yet, but it seems like it's okay to ask here as long as I make it clear in the title that it's from AAMC official practice questions. Please let me know if I've done anything incorrectly and I will fix/delete accordingly.
- I. Dissociation of myosin head from actin filament
- II. Attachment of myosin head to actin filament
- III. Conformational change that moves actin and myosin filaments relative to one another
- IV. Binding of troponin to actin filament
- V. Release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum
- VI. Reuptake of calcium into the sarcoplasm
Answer: I, III, and VI only
Explanation: Dissociation of the myosin head from the actin filament requires the binding of ATP (I). Attachment of the myosin head to the actin filament requires calcium and a troponin/tropomyosin shift (II). The conformational changes that move actin and myosin relative to one another require that ATP be hydrolyzed, for these changes occur upon release of the products of hydrolysis (ADP and Pi) by the myosin head (III). Binding of troponin to actin does not require the hydrolysis of ATP (IV). Release of calcium from the sarcoplasmic reticulum also does not require ATP hydrolysis. This release occurs when calcium ions move via voltage-gated ion channels down their concentration gradient (V). The reuptake of calcium into the sarcoplasmic reticulum occurs via an ATP-hydrolyzing pump that moves calcium against its concentration gradient (VI). Thus, C is the correct response.
How does III require binding and/or hydrolysis of ATP? I'm guessing the "Conformational change that moves actin and myosin filaments relative to one another" refers to the power stroke step, but according to the diagram below and in the answer explanation, ATP binding nor hydrolysis is needed during power stroke. The only thing that happens in this step is that already hydrolyzed ADP and Pi is released, How is this statement correct? How does the release of already hydrolyzed ADP and Pi qualify as "requiring binding and/or hydrolysis of ATP"?

PS I hope I labeled the title correctly, I've tried contacting modulators about making new threads to discuss the new AAMC practice materials but haven't gotten a response yet, but it seems like it's okay to ask here as long as I make it clear in the title that it's from AAMC official practice questions. Please let me know if I've done anything incorrectly and I will fix/delete accordingly.