Histology 6 Muscle
Histology 6 Muscle
Histology 6 Muscle
Wu Xiaojing
wuxiaojing0204@hotmail.com
6 . Muscle tissue
Muscle tissue, the fourth basic tissue type with epithelia,
connective tissues, and nervous tissue, is composed of
cells that optimize the universal cell property of
contractility . As in all cells, actin microfi laments and
associated proteins generate the forces necessary for the
muscle contraction, which drives movement within organ
systems, of blood, and of the body as a whole.
Essentially all muscle cells are of mesodermal origin and
differentiate by a gradual process of cell lengthening with
abundant synthesis of the myofibrillar proteins actin and
myosin.
1.Muscular System Functions
• Body movement
• Maintenance of posture
• Respiration
• Production of body heat
• Communication
• Constriction of organs and vessels
• Heart beat
9-4
2.Properties of Muscle
• Contractility
– Ability of a muscle to shorten with force
• Excitability
– Capacity of muscle to respond to a stimulus
• Extensibility
– Muscle can be stretched to its normal resting
length and beyond to a limited degree
• Elasticity
– Ability of muscle to recoil to original resting length
after stretched
9-5
Without these muscles, nothing
in the body would move and no
body movement would occur.
How is muscle tissue organized at
the tissue level?
Organization of Connective Tissues
Figure 10–1
3.Organization of Connective
Tissues
• Muscles have 3 layers of connective tissues:
1. Epimysium-Exterior collagen layer
• Connected to deep fascia
• Separates muscle from surrounding tissue
2. perimysium- Surrounds muscle fiber bundles
(fascicles)
• Contains blood vessel and nerve supply to
fascicles
3. Endomysium
Surround each muscle fiber
Epimysium:
surrounds
whole muscle
Blood Vessels
• Muscles have extensive vascular systems that:
– supply large amounts of oxygen
– supply nutrients
– carry away wastes
The Sarcolemma
• The cell membrane of a muscle cell
• Surrounds the sarcoplasm (cytoplasm of
muscle fiber)
• A change in transmembrane potential
begins contractions
• All regions of the cell must contract
simultaneously
4.Muscle Tissue Types
• Skeletal
– Attached to bones
– Nuclei multiple and peripherally located
– Striated, Voluntary and involuntary (reflexes)
• Smooth
– Walls of hollow organs, blood vessels, eye, glands, skin
– Single nucleus centrally located
– Not striated, involuntary, gap junctions in visceral
smooth
• Cardiac
– Heart
– Single nucleus centrally located
– Striations, involuntary, intercalated disks
9-14
Classification of Muscle
Skeletal- Cardiac- Smooth-
found in limbs found in heart Found in
viscera
明 暗
– Sarcomere=1/2 I+A+1/2 I
The repetitive functional subunit of the
contractile apparatus, the sarcomere,
extends from Z disc(line ) to Z disc.
The H Zone
• The area around the M line
• Has thick filaments but no thin filaments
• Are strands of protein
• Reach from tips of thick filaments to the
Z line
• Stabilize the filaments
4 Thin Filament Proteins
1. F actin:
– is 2 twisted rows of globular G actin
– the active sites on G actin strands bind to myosin
2. Nebulin:
– holds F actin strands together
3. Tropomyosin:
– is a double strand
– prevents actin–myosin interaction
4. Troponin:
– - a globular protein
– binds tropomyosin to G actin
– controlled by Ca2+
Troponin and Tropomyosin
Initiating Contraction
Figure 10–6 (1 of 5)
Level 3: Muscle Fiber
Level 4: Myofibril
Figure 10–6 (3 of 5)
Level 5: Sarcomere
Muscle Contraction
• Is caused by interactions of thick and thin
filaments
• Structures of protein molecules detemine
interactions
Sliding Filament Model
• Actin myofilaments sliding over myosin to
shorten sarcomeres
– Actin and myosin do not change length
– Shortening sarcomeres responsible for
skeletal muscle contraction
• During relaxation, sarcomeres lengthen
Skeletal Muscle Contraction
Sliding Filaments
Motor Unit: a motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates (these all
contract together)
•Average is 150, but range is four to several hundred muscle fibers in a motor unit
•The finer the movement, the fewer muscle fibers /motor unit
•The fibers are spread throughout the muscle, so stimulation of a single motor unit
causes a weak contraction of the entire muscle
The Neuromuscular Junction
• Is the location of neural stimulation
• Action potential (electrical signal):
– travels along nerve axon
– ends at synaptic terminal
Synaptic Terminal
• Releases neurotransmitter (acetylcholine
or ACh)
• Into the synaptic cleft (gap between
synaptic terminal and motor end plate)
The Process of Contraction
• Neural stimulation of sarcolemma:
– causes excitation–contraction coupling
• Cisternae of SR release Ca2+:
– which triggers interaction of thick and thin
filaments
– consuming ATP and producing tension
Excitation–Contraction Coupling
• Action potential reaches a triad:
– releasing Ca2+
– triggering contraction
• Requires myosin heads to be in “cocked”
position:
– loaded by ATP energy
5 Steps of the Contraction Cycle
1. Exposure of active sites
2. Formation of cross-bridges
3. Pivoting of myosin heads
4. Detachment of cross-bridges
5. Reactivation of myosin
The Contraction Cycle
Figure 10–12 (1 of 4)
The Contraction Cycle
Figure 10–12 (2 of 4)
key steps involved in contraction
of a skeletal muscle fiber
Exposing the Active Site
Figure 10–11
The Contraction Cycle
Figure 10–12 (3 of 4)
The Contraction Cycle
Figure 10–13
A Review of Muscle Contraction
KEY CONCEPT
• Skeletal muscle fibers shorten as thin
filaments slide between thick filaments
• Free Ca2+ in the sarcoplasm triggers
contraction
• SR releases Ca2+ when a motor neuron
stimulates the muscle fiber
• Contraction is an active process
• Relaxation and return to resting length is
passive
6.Structure of Cardiac Tissue
• Cardiac muscle is striated, found
only in the heart
Figure 10–23
Comparing Smooth and Striated Muscle
• Different internal organization of actin and
myosin
• Different functional characteristics