Muscle Tissue
Nearly 1/2 the body’s mass
Function:
-Chemical energy to movement
Types of Muscle Tissue (3)
Skeletal
Cardiac
Smooth
Prefixes of Muscle Involvement (3)
Myo, Mys, Sarco
Skeletal Muscle Tissue
Cardiac Muscle Tissue
Smooth Muscle Tissue
Special Characteristics of Muscle Tissue
-Excitability (responsiveness)
-Contractility (contract)
-Extensibility (Stretchable)
Elasticity (Recoil)
Muscle Functions (8)
-Movement
-Posture
-Stabilization
-Heat
Can also
-Protect Organs
-Forms Valves
-Controls Pupil Size
-Causes “Goosebumps”
Skeletal Muscle
Each muscle served by one artery, one nerve, and one or more veins
Connective Tissue Sheaths of Skeletal Muscle
Supports cells, reinforce whole muscle External to internal -Epimysium -Perimysium -Endomysium
Epimysium
Dense irregular connective tissue surrounding entire muscle
Perimysium
Fibrous connective tissue surrounding fascicles
Endomysium
Fine areolar connective tissue surrounding each muscle fiber
Fascicles
Groups of muscle fibers
Skeletal Muscle Attachment
Two Places
Insertion
Movable bone
Origin
Immovable/less movable bone
Microscopic Anatomy of Skeletal Muscle Fiber
Long, cylindrical cell -up to 30cm long Sarcoplasm=cytoplasm -Glycosomes for glycogen storage -Myoglobin for oxygen storage Modified structures: myofibrils, sacroplasmic reticulum, and T tubules
Myofibrils
Densely packed, rodlike elements -about 80% of cell volume Contains sarcomeres contractile units -Sarcomeres contain myofilaments Exhibit striations- perfectly aligned repeating series of dark bands and light bands
Sarcomere
Myofibril Banding Pattern
Orderly arrangement of actin and myosin myofilaments within sacromere
Actin Myofilaments
Thin Filaments
Myosin Filaments
Thick Filaments
Structure of Thick Filament
Composed of protein myosin
Each of 2 heavy and four light polypeptide chains
-Myosin tails contain 2 heavy polypeptide chains
-Myosin heads contain 2 light polypeptide chains
–Act as cross bridges during contraction
–Binding sites for actin of thin filaments
–Binding sites for ATP