Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2023

First exams 2025

|

Ultrastructure of Striated Muscle (CIE A Level Biology)

Revision Note

Test Yourself
Phil

Author

Phil

Expertise

Biology Project Lead

Ultrastructure of Striated Muscle

  • Striated muscle makes up the muscles in the body that are attached to the skeleton
    • 'Striated' means it is striped/streaky in appearance

Striated Muscle Appearance (Stained)

skeletal striated muscle micrograph

Skeletal striated muscle as seen under the microscope, after staining

Image by Nephron, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons

  • Striated muscle is made up of muscle fibres
  • A muscle fibre is a highly specialised cell-like unit:
    • Each muscle fibre contains an organised arrangement of contractile proteins in the cytoplasm
    • Each muscle fibre is surrounded by a cell surface membrane
    • Each muscle fibre contains many nuclei – this is why muscle fibres are not usually referred to as cells

  • The different parts of a muscle fibre have different names from the equivalent parts of a normal cell:
    • Cell surface membrane = sarcolemma
    • Cytoplasm = sarcoplasm
    • Endoplasmic reticulum = sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR)

  • The sarcolemma has many deep tube-like projections that fold in from its outer surface:
    • These are known as transverse system tubules or T-tubules
    • These run close to the SR

  • The sarcoplasm contains mitochondria and myofibrils
    • The mitochondria carry out aerobic respiration to generate the ATP required for muscle contraction
    • Myofibrils are bundles of actin and myosin filaments, which slide past each other during muscle contraction

  • The membranes of the SR contain protein pumps that transport calcium ions into the lumen of the SR

The Ultrastructure of Striated Muscle Diagram

ultrastructure of striated muscle

The ultrastructure of striated muscle and of a section of muscle fibre

Myofibrils

  • Myofibrils are located in the sarcoplasm
  • Each myofibril is made up of two types of protein filament:
    • Thick filaments made of myosin
    • Thin filaments made of actin

  • These two types of filament are arranged in a particular order, creating different types of band and line

Myofibrils Parts & Descriptions Table

Part of myofibril Description
H band Only thick myosin filaments present
I band Only thin actin filaments present
A band Contains areas where only myosin filaments are present and areas where myosin and actin filaments overlap
M Line Attachment for myosin filaments
Z line Attachment for actin filaments
Sarcomere The section of myofibril between two Z lines

Myofibril Structure Diagram

myofibril structure showing bands and lines

The structure of a myofibril

You've read 0 of your 0 free revision notes

Get unlimited access

to absolutely everything:

  • Downloadable PDFs
  • Unlimited Revision Notes
  • Topic Questions
  • Past Papers
  • Model Answers
  • Videos (Maths and Science)

Join the 100,000+ Students that ❤️ Save My Exams

the (exam) results speak for themselves:

Did this page help you?

Phil

Author: Phil

Phil has a BSc in Biochemistry from the University of Birmingham, followed by an MBA from Manchester Business School. He has 15 years of teaching and tutoring experience, teaching Biology in schools before becoming director of a growing tuition agency. He has also examined Biology for one of the leading UK exam boards. Phil has a particular passion for empowering students to overcome their fear of numbers in a scientific context.