Muscle Tissue
Muscle Tissue 2
Anatomy of Muscle 1
Anatomy of Muscle 2
Anatomy of muscle 3
100

Multinucleated


Peripherally located nuclei


Has striations (“stripes”)

skeletal

100

Centrally located nucleus


No striations!

smooth

100

•Make up sarcomeres

myofilaments

100

•A muscle cell

•Made of many myofibrils

muscle fiber

100

•Connects skeletal muscle to bone

tendon

200

Voluntary control


Functions:


Movement


Maintaining posture


Production of heat

(when you use energy

for it to contract)

Skeletal 

200

Muscle’s ability to respond to stimuli (ex.

motor neurons, electricity)

excitability

200

thin myofilament

actin

200

•Connective tissue sheath that surrounds each muscle fiber

endomysium 

200

•The organ (ex. Biceps brachii)

•Made up of fascicles

muscle

300

Centrally located

nucleus


Has striations

(“stripes”)


Highly branched and

interconnected

cardiac

300

Muscle’s ability to shorten

contractability

300

thick myofilament

myosin

300

•Plasma membrane around each muscle fiber

sacrolema 

300

•Connective tissue sheath that surrounds the entire muscle

epimyisum

400

Mostly involuntary

control (some people

can mentally slow their

heart rates, though!)


Function:


Pump blood through

arteries and veins

cardiac

400

Muscle’s ability to be stretched without

tearing

extendability

400

muscles are made of many 

fasicles

400

•Long proteins that make up each muscle fiber

myofibril

400

A bundle of muscle fibers


fascile

500

Found inside many organs!


Examples: stomach, intestines, blood

vessels, bladder, eye, reproductive organs

smooth

500

Muscle’s ability to return to its original

shape

elasticity
500

myofibrils are made of many

sacromeres

500

•Line up to form myofibrils

Where contraction happens

sarcomere

500

•Connective tissue sheath that surrounds each fascicle

perimysium