Muscular system notes 2017
8 By, K. P. Komal, Asst. Professor of Biochemistry, chitradurga.
side to the other. In between two terminal cisternae is a tubular infolding called a
transverse tubule (T tubule). T tubules are the pathways for action potentials to signal
the sarcoplasmic reticulum to release calcium, causing a muscle contraction. Together,
two terminal cisternae and a transverse tubule form a triad. A sarcomere is the basic
unit of muscle tissue in both cardiac and skeletal muscle. Sarcomeres appear under the
microscope as striations, with alternating dark and light bands. Sarcomeres are
connected to a plasma membrane, called a sarcolemma, by T -tubules, which speed up
the rate of depolarization within the sarcomere.
Individual sarcomeres are composed of long, fibrous proteins that slide past each
other when the muscles contract and relax. The two most important proteins within
sarcomeres are myosin, which forms a thick, flexible filament, and actin, which forms
the thin, more rigid filament. Myosin has a long, fibrous tail and a globular head which
binds to actin. The myosin head also binds to ATP, the source of energy for muscle
movement. Actin molecules are bound to the Z-disc (Zwischeibe disc), which forms the
borders of the sarcomere, separetes one sarcomere from other. Together, myosin and
actin form myofibrils, the repeating molecular structure of sarcomeres. The darker
middle portion of sarcomere is A band (Anisotropic), which extends the entire length of
the thich filament. There are two thin filaments for every thick filament . the I band
(Isotropic) is a ligghter, less dense area. A z disc passes through the centre of each I
band, a narrow h zone (Henson zone), in the centre of each A band contains thick but
no thin filament. Supporting protein that holds thick filament together at the centre
of H zone form M line (Merkel’s line) so named because of sarcomere.
Myofibril activity is required for muscle contraction on the molecular level. When
ATP binds to myosin, it separates from the actin of the myofibril, which causes a
contraction. Muscle contraction is a complex process regulated by calcium influx and the
stimulus of electrical impulses.