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Transverse Tubules

Transverse Tubules (a term sometimes abbreviated to T Tubules)
are tunnel-like extensions of sarcolemma that pass through muscle fibers from one side to the other.

It is due to the side-to-side (across the muscle) orientation of these structures that they are referred to as "transverse".

Transverse tubules play an important role in the physiology of muscle contraction:

  • Muscle action potential (that is, movement of electrical charge) travelling along Transverse tubules trigger the release of calcium(2+) ions from
    the sarcoplasmic reticulum.
  • This allows the calcium (2+) ions to flood into the sarcoplasm,
  • which causes actions and movements of proteins (including actin, myosin, troponin, and tropomyosin) within the myofibrils that eventually muscle contraction.

 

 


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