HUMAN BIOLOGY

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72 Chapter 4

What is muscle tissue?


  • Muscle tissue helps move the body and its parts. It is built of
    cells that can contract.

  • Muscle tissue can contract (shorten) when it is stimulated by an
    outside signal.

  • Skeletal muscle attaches to bones.

  • Smooth muscle is found in internal organs.

  • Cardiac muscle makes up the walls of the heart.


taKe-hoMe Message

muscle tissue Tissue built
of cells that can contract.


Muscle tissue: Movement


Smooth muscle cells taper at both ends (Figure 4.5B). They
are bundled inside a connective tissue sheath. This type
of muscle tissue is specialized for ongoing contraction. It
is found in the walls of internal organs—including blood
vessels, the stomach, and the intestines. The contraction of
smooth muscle is “involuntary” because we usually cannot
make it contract just by thinking about it (as we can with
skeletal muscle).
Cardiac muscle (Figure 4.5C) is found only in the wall of
the heart and its sole function is to pump blood. As you
will read in Chapter 7, special junctions fuse the plasma
membranes of cardiac muscle cells. In places, communica-
tion junctions allow the cells to contract as a unit. When
one cardiac muscle cell is signaled to contract, the cells
around it contract, too.

n    Cells in muscle tissue can contract, a property that enables
muscles to move body parts.

The cells in muscle tissue contract, or shorten, when they
are stimulated by an outside signal. Then they relax and
lengthen. Muscle tissue has long,
cylindrical cells lined up in parallel.
This shape is why muscle cells are
often called “muscle fibers.” Muscle
layers and muscular organs contract and relax in a coordi-
nated way. This is how the action of muscles maintains and
changes the positions of body parts, movements that range
from leaping to blinking your eyes. The three types of mus-
cle tissue are skeletal, smooth, and cardiac muscle tissues.
Skeletal muscle is the main tissue of muscles that attach
to your bones (Figure 4.5A). Skeletal muscle cells are
unusual in that they have more than one nucleus. In a
typical muscle, the cells line up in parallel bundles and
look striped, or striated. The bundles, called fascicles,
are enclosed by a sheath of dense connective tissue.
This arrangement of muscle and connective tissue
makes up the organs we call “muscles.” Because we can
exert conscious control over our skeletal muscles, their
contractions are said to be “voluntary.” The structure
and functioning of skeletal muscle tissue are topics we
consider in Chapter 6.

Figure 4.5 Animated! All types of muscle tissue consist of cells that can contract. (A, C: Ed Reschke; B: Biophoto Associates/Science Source)

A Skeletal muscle


  • Long, multinucleated, cylindrical cells
    with conspicuous striping (striations)

  • Interacts with bone to bring about
    movement, maintain posture


C Cardiac muscle


  • Striated cells attached end to
    end, each with a single nucleus

  • Found only in the heart wall


B Smooth muscle


  • Cells with a single nucleus, tapered
    ends, and no striations

  • Found in the walls of some blood
    vessels, the digestive tract, the
    reproductive tract, the bladder, and
    other hollow organs


nucleus nucleus

adjoining
ends of
abutting
cells

vOLunTAry invOLunTAry

4.3


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