Amoeba Sisters Muscle Tissues and Sliding Filament Model

Amoeba Sisters Muscle Tissues and Sliding Filament Model

11th Grade

9 Qs

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Amoeba Sisters Muscle Tissues and Sliding Filament Model

Amoeba Sisters Muscle Tissues and Sliding Filament Model

Assessment

Interactive Video

Biology

11th Grade

Practice Problem

Hard

Created by

Charles Martinez

Used 1+ times

FREE Resource

About this resource

This quiz focuses on muscle tissues and the sliding filament model of muscle contraction, representing core topics in high school biology at the 11th grade level. The questions assess students' understanding of the three types of muscle tissue (skeletal, cardiac, and smooth), their distinctive properties and functions, and the molecular mechanisms underlying muscle contraction. Students need to comprehend the structural hierarchy from muscle tissue down to sarcomeres, understand the roles of contractile proteins (actin and myosin) and regulatory proteins (troponin and tropomyosin), and grasp the biochemical processes involving calcium ions and ATP. The quiz requires students to distinguish between voluntary and involuntary muscle control, identify how skeletal muscles connect to bones through tendons, and explain the step-by-step process of the sliding filament mechanism where myosin heads perform power strokes to pull actin filaments toward the center of sarcomeres. Created by Charles Martinez, a Biology teacher in India who teaches grade 11. This assessment serves as an excellent tool for evaluating student comprehension of muscle physiology after instruction on body systems and cellular processes. Teachers can deploy this quiz as a formative assessment following lessons on muscle tissue types and contraction mechanisms, or as a review activity before summative assessments on human body systems. The questions work effectively as warm-up activities to activate prior knowledge before diving deeper into related topics like the nervous system's control of muscle movement or energy metabolism in cells. This quiz aligns with NGSS standard HS-LS1-2, which requires students to develop and use models to illustrate the hierarchical organization of interacting systems that provide specific functions within multicellular organisms, and supports Common Core literacy standards in science by requiring students to determine central ideas from scientific texts and explanations.

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9 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the primary function of cardiac muscle tissue?

Regulating the size of the iris

Voluntary movements of the body

Pumping blood throughout the body

Digesting food

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Which muscle tissue type is characterized by involuntary control?

Cardiac muscle tissue

None of the above

Skeletal muscle tissue

Both smooth and cardiac muscle tissues

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Which muscle tissue is responsible for voluntary movements?

Smooth muscle tissue

Cardiac muscle tissue

Skeletal muscle tissue

None of the above

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

How do skeletal muscles attach to bones?

Through tendons

Through ligaments

Directly without any connecting tissue

Through cartilage

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the significance of sarcomeres in muscle fibers?

They produce myosin

They transport calcium ions

They are the basic unit of contraction in muscle fibers

They store ATP

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

Which proteins are involved in muscle contraction?

Actin and Troponin

Actin and Myosin

Myosin and Tropomyosin

Troponin and Tropomyosin

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What causes the sliding of thin filaments towards the center of the sarcomere?

The shortening of thick filaments

The binding of ATP to actin

The movement of Z lines

The power stroke of myosin heads

8.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What is the role of ATP in muscle contraction?

It prevents contraction

It causes the myosin heads to detach from actin

It blocks the myosin binding sites on actin

It is not involved in muscle contraction

9.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

30 sec • 1 pt

What happens when calcium ions bind to troponin?

ATP is hydrolyzed

Tropomyosin moves off the myosin binding sites on actin

Tropomyosin blocks the myosin binding sites on actin

Muscle contraction stops