Muscular Tissue

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Muscle Types & Comparison - Meet the Trio

  • Core Properties: Excitability, contractility, extensibility, elasticity.
  • Functions: Movement, posture maintenance, heat generation.
  • Origin: Primarily mesoderm.

Muscle Tissue Types Histology

FeatureSkeletal MuscleCardiac MuscleSmooth Muscle
AppearanceStriatedStriatedNon-striated
Cell ShapeLong, cylindricalBranchedSpindle-shaped
NucleusMultinucleated, peripheralUsually 1-2, centralSingle, central
ControlVoluntaryInvoluntaryInvoluntary
Special Features-Intercalated discs, Gap junctionsGap junctions (some)
T-tubulesPresent, triads (A-I junction)Present, dyads (Z-disc)Rudimentary/Absent
RegenerationLimited (satellite cells)Very limitedGood

Skeletal Muscle Structure - The Voluntary Powerhouse

  • Organization (Connective Tissue):
    • Epimysium: Surrounds entire muscle.
    • Perimysium: Surrounds fascicles.
    • Endomysium: Surrounds individual muscle fibers.
  • Muscle Fiber (Cell) Structure:
    • Sarcolemma: Plasma membrane.
    • Sarcoplasm: Cytoplasm, contains glycogen & myoglobin.
    • Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR): Smooth ER, stores Ca²⁺.
    • T-tubules (Transverse tubules): Invaginations of sarcolemma; propagate action potentials deep into fiber.
  • Myofibrils & Sarcomere:
    • Myofibrils: Rod-like contractile elements, composed of repeating sarcomeres.
    • Sarcomere: Smallest contractile unit (Z-disc to Z-disc). 📌 Mnemonic: ZIAH M (Z-disc, I-band, A-band, H-zone, M-line).
      • Thick filaments: Primarily Myosin.
      • Thin filaments: Primarily Actin, Tropomyosin, Troponin. Sarcomere diagram with labeled bands and filaments
  • Sliding Filament Theory (Contraction Basics): Myosin heads bind to actin, pulling thin filaments towards the M-line. A-band width remains constant; I-band and H-zone shorten.
  • Motor Unit: A single alpha motor neuron and all the muscle fibers it innervates.

⭐ Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, an X-linked recessive disorder, results from dystrophin absence, leading to progressive muscle fiber degeneration and weakness.

Skeletal Muscle Fiber Types Comparison:

FeatureType I (Slow Oxidative)Type IIa (Fast Oxidative-Glycolytic)Type IIb (Fast Glycolytic)
Contraction SpeedSlowFastFast
Fatigue ResistanceHighIntermediateLow
Myoglobin ContentHigh (Red muscle)Intermediate (Red-Pink muscle)Low (White muscle)
MitochondriaManyManyFew
Primary ATP SourceOxidative Phosph.Oxidative & GlycolysisGlycolysis

Cardiac Muscle Histology - The Tireless Pump

  • Cells: Striated, short, branched; 1-2 centrally located nuclei. End-to-end connections via intercalated discs.
  • Intercalated Discs (IDs): Specialized junctional complexes, unique to cardiac muscle.
    • Fascia Adherens (transverse part): Anchors actin filaments; transmits contractile forces.
    • Desmosomes (macula adherens; transverse & lateral parts): Bind cells tightly, providing mechanical strength; resist stress during contraction.
    • Gap Junctions (mainly lateral part): Allow rapid passage of ions; facilitate electrical coupling, enabling muscle to function as a syncytium.
    • 📌 Mnemonic: "Fierce Dogs Growl" (Fascia adherens, Desmosomes, Gap junctions).
  • Sarcotubular System:
    • T-tubules: Wider and fewer than in skeletal muscle; located at Z-lines (not A-I junction).
    • Sarcoplasmic Reticulum (SR): Less extensive; forms Diads (one T-tubule + one SR terminal cisterna) at the Z-lines.
  • Energy Supply: Abundant mitochondria (occupy up to 40% of cell volume) and numerous glycogen granules, reflecting high aerobic metabolism.
  • Key Property: Autorhythmicity - intrinsic ability to initiate spontaneous rhythmic contractions.

Cardiac muscle intercalated disc ultrastructure

⭐ Intercalated discs, with their gap junctions, allow cardiac muscle to function as an electrical syncytium, essential for coordinated heart contraction.

Smooth Muscle Histology - The Unsung Worker

  • Cell Structure:
    • Spindle-shaped (fusiform) cells.
    • Single, centrally located nucleus.
    • Non-striated: Lacks organized sarcomeres, giving a "smooth" appearance.
  • Contractile Apparatus:
    • Actin, myosin filaments present.
    • Intermediate filaments (e.g., desmin, vimentin) anchored to dense bodies (cytoplasmic & membrane-associated; analogous to Z-discs).
  • Membrane Features:
    • Caveolae: Numerous sarcolemmal invaginations; act like primitive T-tubules, involved in $Ca^{2+}$ influx.
  • Contraction Mechanism:
    • Regulated by $Ca^{2+}$-calmodulin complex (no troponin).
    • Activation of Myosin Light Chain Kinase (MLCK).
  • Types:
    • Unitary (visceral): Cells electrically coupled by gap junctions; contract as a syncytium (e.g., GI tract, uterus).
    • Multiunit: Each cell independently innervated; allows fine control (e.g., iris, arrector pili muscles).

Smooth muscle histology and structure

⭐ Smooth muscle contraction is initiated by $Ca^{2+}$-calmodulin complex, which activates myosin light chain kinase (MLCK), unlike troponin-based regulation in striated muscles.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Skeletal muscle: Multinucleated, striated, voluntary; sarcomere (Z-disc to Z-disc) is functional unit.
  • Cardiac muscle: Striated, involuntary, branched; intercalated discs (gap junctions, desmosomes) are key. Central single nucleus.
  • Smooth muscle: Non-striated, involuntary, spindle-shaped cells; single central nucleus. Dense bodies anchor actin.
  • Sarcoplasmic reticulum stores and releases Ca²⁺ for contraction. T-tubules ensure uniform excitation.
  • Contractile proteins: Actin (thin), Myosin (thick). Regulatory proteins: Troponin, Tropomyosin (striated muscle).

Practice Questions: Muscular Tissue

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Intermediate filaments in connective tissue are which type of structural component?

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Flashcards: Muscular Tissue

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Dystrophin normally anchors the muscle _____ to the extracellular matrix; primarily in skeletal and cardiac muscle

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Dystrophin normally anchors the muscle _____ to the extracellular matrix; primarily in skeletal and cardiac muscle

cytoskeleton

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