Musculoskeletal System: Sugito Wonodirekso, MS, DR Department of Histology Fmui
The document provides an overview of the musculoskeletal system, with a focus on skeletal muscle structure and function. It discusses the objectives, general features, and types of muscle tissues. For skeletal muscle, it describes the histogenesis, mature cell structure, tissue organization into fascicles and bundles, sarcomere structure, myofilament composition of actin and myosin, and the role of T-tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum in muscle contraction. Diagrams illustrate the sarcomere, myofilaments, and triadic relationship between T-tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum that facilitates muscle excitation-contraction coupling.
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Musculoskeletal System: Sugito Wonodirekso, MS, DR Department of Histology Fmui
The document provides an overview of the musculoskeletal system, with a focus on skeletal muscle structure and function. It discusses the objectives, general features, and types of muscle tissues. For skeletal muscle, it describes the histogenesis, mature cell structure, tissue organization into fascicles and bundles, sarcomere structure, myofilament composition of actin and myosin, and the role of T-tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum in muscle contraction. Diagrams illustrate the sarcomere, myofilaments, and triadic relationship between T-tubules and sarcoplasmic reticulum that facilitates muscle excitation-contraction coupling.
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Musculoskeletal System
Sugito Wonodirekso, MS, Dr
Department of Histology FMUI Materials Skeletal muscle Joint • Joint types • Bone • Cartilages • Supporting tissues
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Objectives of the muscle tissue Identify skillfully the skeletal muscle structure Identify the structural and functional different between 3 major types of muscle tissue Comprehend the relationships between muscle fascicles, muscle fibers, myofibrils, and myofilaments Explain the structure and function of T-tubule in skeletal muscle Analyze the relationships between normal structure and function of skeletal muscle Explain the regeneration process of skeletal muscle 12/7/2008 Musculoskeletal System 3 General features of muscle tissues Terminology • Prefixes: Sarco- and or myo- Specialized for contraction • Myofilaments: actin (thin) and myosin (thick) Mesodermal origin • Exception: iris smooth muscle arise from ectoderm Cell shape • May reach 4 cm long called fibers (myofibers) Organization • Works in groups or separately Two major types • Smooth and striated
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Muscle types and characteristics Features Skeletal muscle Cardiac muscle Smooth muscle (Striated voluntary) (Striated, involuntary) (Non-striated) Cells Thick, long, cylindric Branched, cylindric Small, spindle-shape unbranched Nuclei per Many, peripheral One or two, central One, central cell Filament ratio 6 thin/1 thick 6 thin/1 thick 12 thin/1 thick Sarcoplasmic Highly organized Less organized Poorly organized reticulum and sarcoplasmic reticulum sarcoplasmic reticulum; sarcoplasmic reticulum; myofibrils surrounds myofibrils no distinc myofibrils no distinc myofibrils
T-tubules At A-I junction; form At Z lines; form dyads None
triads Motor end- Present Absent Absent plates Motor control Voluntary Involuntary Involuntary Other Prominent fascicles Intercalated disks at cell- Abundant caveolae to-cell junctions Thick perimysium and Cell overlap epimysium 12/7/2008 Musculoskeletal System 5 Skeletal muscle (this is our concern now) Histogenesis • Mesenchymal cells of mesodermal origin fuse to each other to make • Myoblasts which then fuse to make • Myotubes which later • Elongate by incorporating additional myoblasts • Eventually accumulated myofilaments which are organized into myofibrils and displaced nuclei and other cytoplasmic components peripherally
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Skeletal muscle cells Mature skeletal muscle fibers: • Elongated • Unbranched • Cylindrical • Multinucleated • Flattened peripherally displaced nuclei, lie just under sarcolemma (muscle cell plasma membrane) • Most organelles and sarcoplasm (muscle cells cytoplasm) are displaced near the nuclei’s poles • Sarcoplasm contains mitochondria, glycogen granules, and myoglobin (oxygen-binding protein). It accumulates lipofuscin pigment with age • Mature skeletal cell are end cells and cannot divide
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Skeletal muscle tissue Cross-cut of skeletal muscle to show connective tissue partitioning of muscle into groups or bundles of fibers. Endomysium is very delicate and lies between individual fibers, while perimysium is more visible and lies around a group of fibers. Epimysium is not seen here but ensheaths a whole muscle. In this picture notice the presence of small blood vessels in both perimysium and endomysium. Notice also the cross-cuts of myofibrils within the muscle cells, making them look grainy.
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Higher power of skeletal muscle for details of cross-striations. Notice thin Z discs and heavy A bands. From one Z disc to the next is a sarcomere, the unit of muscle contraction. In the upper muscle cell notice shadowy myofibrils running longitudinally.
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Skeletal muscle cells (fibers), with cross- striations and peripheral nuclei.
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Muscle fibers organization
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Sarcomeres (contraction units)
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Sarcomere and the cross sections
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Myofilament Thin filaments (actin) • Filamentous actin (F-actin) is polymeric chain of globular actin (G-actin) monomer. Each thin filament consist of 2 double helix wound F-actin strands • Tropomyosin is long, thin, double-helical polipeptides that wrap around the actin double helix, lies in grooves on its surface, and spans 7 G-actin monomers • Troponin is a complex of 3 globular proteins. o TnT (Troponin T) attaches each complex to specific site on each tropomyosin molecule, o TnC binds calcium ions, and o TnI inhibits the interaction between the thin and thick filaments
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Actin filaments
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Myofilament Thick filaments (myosin): • Long golf-club-shaped polypeptide • A bundles of myosin molecules with their shafts pointing toward and overlapping in the bundle’s middle and their heads projecting from the bundle’s ends • This arrangement leaves a headless region in the center of each filament corresponding to the H band • Treating myosin molecule with papain (a proteolytic enzyme) cleaves them, at a point near head, into 2 pieces • The piece containing most of the thin shaft is termed light meromyosin; the head and the associated portion of the shaft make up the heavy meromyosin • The head portion of heavy meromyosin has an ATP-binding site and an actin binding site, which are necessary for contraction
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Actin and myosin filaments relationship
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Myofilament Organization • The banding pattern of skeletal muscle reflects the grouping of myofilaments into parallel bundles of thin and thick filaments called myofibrils. Each muscle fiber may contain several myofibrils; the number depending on its size. • Take special attention on the appearance of myofibrils in cross- and longitudinal section, especially in EM images and its schematic version
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Sarcomere and muscle contraction Diagram of contraction of skeletal muscle. On the left is the view with light microscopy. On the right are the thin actin filaments and thick myosin filaments seen in EM. Notice that the total width of the A band stays the same throughout and that the sliding in or out of the actin filaments determines the width of the H band. Consider which filaments you would see if you cut the muscle cross-wise through the I band, A band, or H band.
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T-tubules and the Triads Drawing of relationship (at EM level) of myofibrils to sarcoplasmic reticulum (smooth ER) and T-tubules in skeletal muscle. In this drawing the sarcoplasmic reticulum is labelled "sarcotubules" and "terminal cisternae". Notice that T-tubules are extensions of the sarcolemma (cell membrane, seen at right-hand edge), so that depolarization can spread along this part of the sarcolemma as well. (See diagrams and further explanation in your textbook.) 12/7/2008 Musculoskeletal System 20 The sarcomere and the diads Same diagram, for cardiac muscle. Note differences with skeletal muscle in: • their amount and arrangement of sarcoplasmic reticulum • the presence or near-absence of terminal cisterns (next to the T-tubules) • the position of T-tubules in relation to the A, I, and Z bands seen at the left. A triad consists of two terminal cisterns with a T- tubule in the middle. When the cisterns are not well developed, a true triad does not exist. A diad means two elements are together, as with one T- tubule and a neighboring bit of sarcoplasmic reticulum. NOTE: sarcoplasmic reticulum is just a form of smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER). In muscle it is particularly associated with the release of calcium ions needed for contraction.
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The sarcomere EM of several myofibrils running longitudinally through skeletal muscle cell. Between individual myofibrils lie the mitochondria (M) and glycogen (G) of the cytoplasm. Within each myofibril are the typical striations: • A= A band; • I= I band; • Z= Z line; and • H= H band. The banding is formed by the arrangement of myosin and actin filaments. 12/7/2008 Musculoskeletal System 22 Sarcomere and the contraction
Osteocyte EM. Osteocyte in its lacuna. Notice the pericellular space, organell some of which are globules containing Calcium, and the cell processes
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Tight junction between osteocytes’ processes in its canaliculus
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Muscle-bone attachment
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Younger compact bone tissue
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Bone dynamics Appositional growth Bone vascular system
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Bone Osteocytes Compact bone tissue
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Hyaline cartilage
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Cartilage Chondrocyte Appositional growth
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Cartilage Hyalin cartilage Elastic cartilage
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Cartilage Elastic cartilage Fibrous cartilage
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Cartilage Hyalin cartilage Hyalin cartilage on the joint surface
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Joint
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Bone Highly vascularized Dynamic tissue Regenerate completely
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Cartilage
Avascular Regenerate poorly
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Joint supporting tissues
Mostly dens collagen connective tissues
Regenerate fairly good but not as good as bone
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How joints working Vertebrates move by application of the principles of the lever. Levers amplify or increase the force or velocity of motion. The amount of amplification depends on the length of the lever. There are three types of skeletal system, all interact with muscles using the lever.