Abstract

The three-dimensional arrangement of mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum in the red muscle fiber was studied both in thick sections of the rat diaphragm fixed in glutaraldehyde and impregnated with uranyl acetate followed by lead and copper citrate, and in thin sections of glutaraldehyde fixed tissue treated with ferrocyanide-reduced osmium. The mitochondria were located either at the periphery of the fiber, where they were spherical, or between the myofibrils, where they formed longitudinal columns of rectangular, slightly flattened elements. From both types of mitochondria, thin, elongated branches arose at right angles that formed transversely oriented mitochondrial pairs at the I band level. At the periphery of the fiber, the endoplasmic reticulum took the appearance of a subsarcolemmal network of tubular cisternae oriented parallel to the cell surface. In the juxtanuclear region, it was made up of spherical masses composed of tightly knitted tubules that were interconnected by more loosely anastomosed tubules. In between the myofibrils, it was composed of longitudinally oriented repetitive units whose structure varied according to their position in from of the A or I bands of the myofibrils. In front of the A band, the endoplasmic reticulum appeared as a single sheet of anastomotic tubules compressed between the adjacent myofibrils, whereas at the I band level, its tubular elements passed in front and behind the transverse expansions of the mitochondria to form an intricate ultilayered network in from of the Z line.

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