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The Journal of Cell Biology, Vol 56, 74-91, Copyright © 1973 by Rockefeller University Press

ARTICLE

ULTRASTRUCTURE OF BARNACLE GIANT MUSCLE FIBERS

Graham Hoyle 1, Patricia A. McNeill 1, and Allen I. Selverston 1

1 From the Department of Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403.

Dr. Selverston's present address is the Department of Biology, University of California, San Diego, California 92109.

Increasing use of barnacle giant muscle fibers for physiological research has prompted this investigation of their fine structure. The fibers are invaginated by a multibranched system of clefts connecting to the exterior and filled with material similar to that of the basement material of the sarcolemmal complex. Tubules originate from the surface plasma membrane at irregular sites, and also from the clefts They run transversely, spirally, and longitudinally, making many diadic and some triadic contacts with cisternal sacs of the longitudinal sarcoplasmic reticulum. The contacts are not confined to any particular region of the sarcomere. The tubules are wider and their walls are thicker at points of contact with Z material. Some linking of the Z regions occurs across spaces within the fiber which contain large numbers of glycogen particles. A-band lengths are extremely variable, in the range 2.2 µm–20.3 µm (average 5.2 µm) Individual thick filaments have thin (110 Å) hollow regions alternating with thick (340 Å) solid ones. Bridges between thick filaments occur at random points and are not concentrated into an M band The thin:thick filament ratio is variable in different parts of a fiber, from 3:1 to 6:1. Z bands are basically perforated, but the number of perforations may increase during contraction.

Submitted on June 9, 1972
Revised on August 14, 1972


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