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Muscle tissue is composed of cells that have the special ability
to shorten or contract in order to produce movement of the body
parts. The tissue is highly cellular and is well supplied with blood
vessels. The cells are long and slender so they are sometimes called
muscle fibers, and these are usually arranged in bundles or layers
that are surrounded by connective tissue. Actin and myosin are contractile
proteins in muscle tissue.
Muscle tissue can be categorized into skeletal muscle tissue, smooth
muscle tissue, and cardiac muscle tissue.
Skeletal muscle fibers are cylindrical, multinucleated, striated,
and under voluntary control. Smooth muscle cells are spindle shaped,
have a single, centrally located nucleus, and lack striations. They
are called involuntary muscles. Cardiac muscle has branching fibers,
one nucleus per cell, striations, and intercalated disks. Its contraction
is not under voluntary control.
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