Subtitles section Play video
-
Muscle is one of the primary tissue types.
-
Skeletal muscle perform six major functions.
-
Skeletal muscle produces skeletal movement by
-
contracting and pulling on the bones of the skeleton.
-
Skeletal muscles maintain posture and body position by
-
maintaining tension, thereby allowing you to hold your head
-
while sitting and reading a book or balancing your body
-
when you walk or stand.
-
Skeletal muscles support soft tissues, such as abdominal
-
muscles and pelvic floor muscles, supporting the organs
-
of the abdominal-pelvic cavity.
-
Skeletal muscles guard entrances and exits by
-
surrounding the openings of the
-
digestive and urinary tracts.
-
Skeletal muscles maintain body temperature by releasing heat
-
when they are working.
-
And finally, skeletal muscles can store nutrient reserves
-
because the protein in muscles can be broken down into amino
-
acids, which can then be used to produce energy.
-
Each muscle is composed of muscle cells
-
called muscle fibers.
-
These muscle fibers are contained in
-
bundles called fascicles.
-
Muscles have connective tissue that's associated with the
-
entire muscle, with the fascicle or muscle bundle, and
-
with the individual muscle fiber.
-
Epimysium is a dense layer of collagen fibers that surrounds
-
the entire muscle.
-
It separates the muscle from nearby tissues and organs.
-
The perimysium divides the skeletal muscle into a series
-
of compartments.
-
Each compartment contains a muscle fascicle.
-
The perimysium contains blood vessels and nerves.
-
Within each fascicle, the endomysium is more delicate
-
and surrounds each individual muscle fiber.
-
The endomysium contains capillary blood vessels, nerve
-
fibers, and myosatellite cells, which are stem cells,
-
that help to repair damaged muscle tissue.
-
The collagen fibers of the epimysium, the perimysium and
-
the endomysium come together to form either a bundle, known
-
as the tendon, or a broad sheet, called an aponeurosis.
-
Tendons and aponeuroses usually attach skeletal
-
muscles to bones.
-
Skeletal muscle cells or fibers are very different from
-
the typical cells we've seen so far.
-
One obvious difference is that these skeletal muscle fibers
-
are much larger than other cells.
-
A muscle fiber from the thigh muscle could have a length up
-
to 12 inches.
-
A second difference is that skeletal muscle contains
-
hundreds of nuclei just internal to the cell membrane.
-
These nuclei are needed to produce enzymes and structural
-
proteins that are required for normal muscle contractions.
-
The cell membrane of a muscle fiber is known as the
-
sarcolemma and the cytoplasm is known as the sarcoplasm.
-
Inside each muscle fiber are hundreds to thousands of
-
structures called myofibrils.
-
These structures are cylindrical in shape.
-
They can actively shorten in shape and are responsible for
-
skeletal muscle fiber contraction.
-
Myofibrils consist of protein filaments called myofilaments.
-
These myofilaments are either thin filaments composed
-
primarily of actin or thick filaments composed
-
primarily of myosin.
-
The Myofibrils are anchored to each end of the muscle fiber,
-
which is connected to its tendon.
-
As a result, when the myofibrils contract, the
-
entire cell shortens and pulls on the tendon.
-
Transverse tubules or T-tubules are narrow tubes
-
that are continuous with the sarcolemma and extend deep
-
into the sarcoplasm.
-
They are filled with extra cellular fluid and form
-
passageways through the muscle fiber, like a network of
-
tunnels through a mountain.
-
Electrical impulses called action potentials travel along
-
the T-tubules into the cell interior.
-
These action potentials trigger muscle fiber
-
contraction.
-
Branches of the T-tubules surround each myofibril.
-
The sarcoplasmic reticulum is similar to the smooth
-
endoplasmic reticulum of other cells.
-
The sarcoplasmic reticulum fits over each individual
-
myofibril like a lacy shirt sleeve.
-
Where a T-tubule encircles the myofibril, the sarcoplasmic
-
tubule expands, and these chambers are
-
called terminal cisternae.
-
The terminal cisternae contains stored calcium.
-
And sometimes the concentration of calcium
-
inside the cisternae is a thousand times higher than the
-
levels inside the sarcoplasm.
-
The thick and thin filaments of the myofibril are organized
-
into repeating functional units called sarcomeres.
-
Sarcomeres are the smallest functional units
-
of the muscle fiber.
-
Interactions between the thick and thin filaments of
-
sarcomeres are responsible for muscle contraction.
-
One myofibril consists of approximately 10,000
-
sarcomeres end to end.
-
A sarcomere contains thick filaments, thin filaments,
-
proteins that stabilize the positions of the thick and
-
thin filaments, and proteins that regulate the interactions
-
between the thick and thin filaments.
-
The thick and thin filaments are different in size,
-
density, and distribution.
-
These differences account for the banded
-
appearance of each myofibril.
-
The thick filaments are at the center of each sarcomere.
-
Proteins of the M-line connect the central portion of each
-
thick filament to neighboring thick filaments.
-
M stands for middle.
-
The thin filaments are located between the thick filaments in
-
an area called the zone of overlap.
-
A single thin filament contains two rows of 300 to
-
400 individual globular molecules.
-
Each of these molecules contains an active site that
-
can bind to myosin.
-
Under resting conditions, a complex called the
-
tropomyosin-troponin molecule covers the active sites and
-
prevents the binding of myosin to the active site.
-
Tropomyosin is a double-stranded, rope-like
-
structure that covers the active sites
-
on the actin molecules.
-
Troponin is a molecule that locks the tropomyosin molecule
-
to the actin molecule, thereby preventing the exposure of the
-
actin molecule's active site.
-
A thick filament contains about 300 myosin molecules.
-
The myosin molecules are twisted around each other.
-
Each myosin molecule has a long tail and a head which
-
projects outward toward the nearest thin filament.
-
When the myosin heads interact with thin filaments during a
-
contraction, they are known as cross-bridges.
-
The connection between the head and the tail of the
-
myosin acts as a hinge that lets the head pivot.
-
When they head pivots, it swings toward the M-line or
-
the center of the sarcomere.
-
All the myosin molecules are arranged with their tails
-
pointing towards the M-line.
-
When the myosin head forms a cross-bridge with the actin
-
molecule's active site and the head pivots, causing the thin
-
filaments to slide toward the center of each sarcomere, this
-
is known as the sliding filament theory.
-
During a contraction, sliding occurs in every sarcomere
-
along the myofibril.
-
As a result, the myofibril gets shorter.
-
When myofibrils get shorter, so does the muscle fiber.