Grade 12 Exercise Science

Muscle Structure and Function Note

Properties of Muscle Fibre

  1. Excitability/ Irritability
  • ability to receive and respond to stimuli
  1. Contractibility
  • ability to shorten and thicken, or contract
  1. Extensibility
  • ability to stretch, or extend
  1. Elasticity
  • ability return to its original shape after contraction or extension
  1. Conductivity
  • ability to transmit nerve impulses

Muscle Types

  1. Skeletal
  • named for its location (attached to bones and moves the skeleton)
  • it is striated (has striations, or alternating bands of light and dark bands visible under microscope)
  • it is voluntary because it can be made to contract and relax by conscious control
  1. Cardiac
  • forms the bulk of the wall of the heart
  • it is striated and involuntary
  1. Smooth
  • involved with internal processes
  • located in the internal structures (e.g. blood vessels, the stomach, and the intestines)
  • it is non-striated and involuntary

Muscle Function

  1. Motion
  • walking, beating of the heart, churning food in stomach, etc.
  1. Maintenance of posture
  • contraction of skeletal muscles holds the body in stationary positions
  1. Heat production
  • skeletal muscle contractions produce heat which helps to maintain normal body temperature

Connective Tissue Components

  1. Fascia/ Epimysium
  • a sheet or broad band of fibrous connective tissue beneath the skin or around muscles and other organs of the body
  1. Fasiculi or fasicules
  • bundles of muscle fibres
  1. Perimysium
  • a fibrous connective tissue that covers the fasicules
  1. Endomysium
  • the fibrous connective tissue that wraps each individual muscle cell
  1. Tendon
  • a cord of connective tissue that attaches a muscle to a bone
  • made of epimysium, perimysium, and endomysium

Muscle structure under a microscope

Muscle fibres

  • skeletal muscle viewed under a microscope contains thousands of these elongated, cylindrical cells

Sarcolemma

  • the plasma membrane that covers each muscle fibre

Myofibrils

  • found within each skeletal muscle fibre
  • cylindrical structures which run longitudinally through the muscle fibre
  • consist of two smaller structures called myofilaments

Myofilaments

  • thin myofilaments and thick myofilaments
  • do not extend the entire length of a muscle fibre
  • they are arranged in compartments called sarcomeres

Sarcomeres

  • separated by narrow zones of dense material called Z lines
  • within a sarcomere is a dark area called the A band (thick myofilaments)
  • ends of the A band are darker because of overlapping thick and thin myofilaments
  • the light coloured area is called the I band (thin myofilaments)
  • the combination of alternating dark A bands and light I bands gives the muscle fibre its striated appearance

Thin myofilaments

  • thin myofilaments are anchored to the Z lines
  • composed mostly of the protein actin
  • actin is arranged in two single strands that entwine like a rope
  • each actin molecule contains a myosin- binding site
  • thin myofilaments contain two other protein molecules that help regulate muscle contraction (tropomyosin and troponin)

Thick myofilaments

  • composed mostly of the protein myosin which is shaped like a golf club
  • the heads of the golf clubs project outward
  • these projecting heads are called cross bridges and contain an actin- binding site and an ATP binding site

Sliding Filament Theory

  • during muscle contraction, thin myofilaments slide inward toward the centre of a sarcomere
  • sarcomere shortens, but the lengths of the thin and thick myofilaments do not change
  • myosin cross bridges of the thick myofilaments connect with portions of actin on thin myofilaments
  • myosin cross bridges move like the oars of a boat on the surface of the thin myofilaments
  • thin and thick myofilaments slide past one another
  • as thin myofilaments slide inward, the Z lines are drawn toward each other and the sarcomere is shortened
  • myofilament sliding and sarcomere shortening result in muscle contraction
  • this process can only occur in the presence of sufficient calcium (Ca++) ions and an adequate supply of energy (ATP)