Connective tissue coverings
Tendon
This connective tissue surrounds each muscle and may project beyond the ends of its muscle fibers, forming a cordlike tendon.
Myofibrils
The sarcoplasm also has abundant long, parallel structures called myofibrils.
fasicles
This section contains bundles of skeletal muscle fibers
sarcoplasmasmic
cytoplasm (sarcoplasm) of the fiber contains many small, oval nuclei and mitochondria.
Sarcolemma
Just beneath the muscle cell membrane (sarcolemma)
fascia
An individual muscle is separated from adjacent muscles and held in position by layers of dense connective tissue called fascia.
perimysium
Another layer of connective tissue, called the perimysium, extends inward from the epimysium and separates the muscle tissue into small sections.
skeletal muscle fiber
A skeletal muscle fiber a single muscle cell. Each fiber forms from many undifferentiated cells that fuse during development. The resulting multinucleated muscle fiber is a thin, elongated cyllinder with rounded ends that attach to the connective tissues associated with a muscle.
endomysium
Each muscle fiber within a fasicle lies within a layer of connective tissue in the form of a thin covering called endomysium.
Aponeuroses
Fibers in a tendon may intertwine with those in the periosteum of a bone, attaching the muscle to the bone. Or, the connective tissues associated with a muscle form broad, fibrous sheets called aponeuroses, which may attach to bone or the coverings of adjacent muscles.
epimysium
The layer of connective tissue that closely surrounds a skeletal muscle is called the epimysium, which in some areas of the body may merge with the surrounding deep fascia.
The myofibrils contain
The myofibrils play a fundamental role in the muscle contraction mechanism. They consist of two types of protein filaments: thick filaments composed of the protein myosin, and thin filaments composed primarily of the protein actin.