Muscle Tissue
Sarcoplasm
Cytoplasm of a muscle fiber
myfibril
responsible for skeletal muscle fiber contraction
Myosatellite cells
stem celsl that take part in the repair of damaged muscle tissue
Action potentials
Electrical impules conducted by the sarcolemma travel along the t tubules into the cell interior to trigger muscle contraction.
Endomysium
Connective tissue that surrounds the individual skeletal muscle cells called muscle fibers, and loosely interconnects adjacent muscle fibers. - contains capillary networks that supply blood to the muscle fiber myosatellite cells (stem cells), and nerve fibers that control the muscle.
Sarcolemma
Plasma membrane of a muscle fiber
tendon
Point at which the collagen fibers of the epimysium, perimysium, and endomysium come together to form a bundle - usually attach skeletal muscles to bone
aponeurosis
Point at which the collagen fibers of the epimysium, perimysium, and endomysium come together to form a sheet which connects muscles to bone
Epimysium
The dense layer of collagen fibers that surrounds the entire muscle.
Myofilaments
bundles of protein filaments that make up myofibrils.
Perimysium
divides the skeletal muscle into a series of compartments which contain a bundle of muscle fibers - made up of collagen and elastic fibers as well as blood vessels and nerves that serve the muscle fibers within the fascicles.
myoblasts
embronic cells that fuse, forming individual multinucleate skeletal muscle fibers.
Transverse tubules
narrow tubes that are continuous with the sarcolemma and extend depp into the sarcoplasm - filled with extracellular fluid and form passageways through the muscle fiber, like a network of tunnels through a mountain.