Muscle Structure Flashcards
What are the 3 types of muscles?
Skeletal Muscle – voluntary, striated (banded) muscle. Short and fast contraction speed with quick fatigue. They have regular arrangement so muscle contracts in one direction.
- Tubular fibres and are multinucleated
Cardiac Muscle – involuntary, specialised striated (fainter striations than in skeletal muscle) muscle. Fairly fast and fairly short contraction speed. Myogenic (contract without nervous stimulus)
- Fibres are branched and uninucleate
Smooth (involuntary) Muscle – involuntary, non-striated muscle. No regular arrangement. Slow contractions and can remain contracted for a long period of time.
- Spindle shaped fibred, uninucleate
What is the structure of a skeletal muscle fibre?
- Skeletal muscle made from bundle of muscle fibre, enclosed by a sarcolemma (plasma membrane enclosing the bundles of fibre)
- Some of the sarcolemma folds inwards (called T or transverse tubules) to help spread electrical impulses through the sarcoplasm
- The fibres have many nuclei – multinucleated
- The fibres are longer than normal cells, formed from fusing of embryonic cells
- Makes them stronger as a junction between cells would be a weak point
- The fibres are longer than normal cells, formed from fusing of embryonic cells
- Sarcoplasm – shared cytoplasm within a muscle fibre
Why do muscle fibres have many mitochondria?
Muscle fibres have lots of mitochondria providing ATP for muscle contraction, contains modified ER called sarcoplasmic reticulum
Extends throughout the muscle fibre, has calcium ions needed for muscle contraction
What are myofibrils and what are they made of?
Each muscle fibre has multiple myofibril (long cylindrical organelles made of protein that are specialised for contraction)
- Myofibrils exist in parallel to maximise the contraction force
Made of:
- Actin – thinner filament – 2 strands twisted around one another
- Myosin – thicker filament, long rod-shaped fibres with bulbous heads, projecting to one side
What causes the striped appearance (striated) in myofibrils?
Has alternating light and dark bands giving a striped appearance:
- Light bands – appear lighter, where actin and myosin do not overlap (known as I-Band)
- Dark bands – presence of thick myosin filaments, the edges are dark as myosin doesn’t overlap with actin (known as A-Band)
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Z-Line – found at centre of each light band, distance between adjacent Z-lines is a sarcomere (one functional unit of a myofibril)
- As muscle contracts, sarcomere shortens
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H-Zone – lighter coloured region at the centre of the dark band, only myosin is present
- As muscle contracts H-Zone gets smaller