20.9
View the full transcript and gain access to JoVE Core videos
Q1: What are the two main components of a motor unit?
A motor unit consists of a single efferent motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates. The motor neuron originates in the spinal cord or brain stem and branches to form neuromuscular junctions with multiple muscle fibers. However, each individual muscle fiber receives input from only one motor neuron, establishing a one-to-many relationship that enables coordinated muscle contraction.
Q2: How does motor unit size affect movement precision and control?
Motor unit size varies based on movement requirements. Small motor units, with few muscle fibers per neuron, control muscles requiring rapid, precise movements like eye and finger muscles. Large motor units, containing many muscle fibers, control limb and trunk movements where precision is less critical. This size variation allows the nervous system to match control resolution to functional demands.
Q3: Why does stimulation of a single motor unit produce only weak muscle contraction?
A single motor unit innervates only a portion of the total muscle fibers in a skeletal muscle. When one motor neuron fires an action potential, it contracts all its innervated fibers simultaneously, but this represents just a fraction of the entire muscle. Stronger contractions require recruitment of multiple motor units firing together to engage more muscle fibers.
Q4: What is the relationship between lower motor neurons and skeletal muscle control?
Lower motor neurons are efferent neurons that directly control skeletal muscle, the body's most abundant muscle type. Those in the brain stem transmit signals through cranial nerves to head and neck muscles, while those in the spinal cord send signals along spinal nerves to limb and trunk muscles. Each lower motor neuron fires an action potential that contracts all its innervated skeletal muscle cells simultaneously.
Q5: How many motor neurons innervate a single muscle fiber?
Each skeletal muscle fiber is innervated by exactly one motor neuron. This one-to-one relationship ensures that a single muscle fiber contracts only when its specific motor neuron fires. In contrast, one motor neuron can branch and innervate multiple muscle fibers, creating the one-to-many relationship that defines a motor unit.
Q6: What determines whether a muscle uses small or large motor units?
Motor unit size depends on the muscle's functional role and the precision required for movement. Muscles requiring fine, rapid control, such as those in the eyes and fingers, use small motor units with few fibers per neuron. Weight-bearing muscles in limbs and trunk, which prioritize strength over precision, use large motor units with several hundred fibers per neuron.
Q7: How do neuromuscular junctions enable motor unit function?
Motor neuron axons branch into multiple endings that form neuromuscular junctions throughout a muscle. These junctions transmit signals from the motor neuron to its innervated muscle fibers. When the motor neuron fires, all neuromuscular junctions activate simultaneously, causing coordinated contraction of all muscle fibers in that motor unit.
Explore Related Chapters



































