Cytology and General Histology: Atlas

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Muscle tissues

Striated muscle tissues

  • They contain certain specialized contractile structures called striated myofibrils consisting of regularly recurring patterns (bands) with different optical properties (birefringence in polarized light)

Skeletal striated muscle tissue

  • constitutes skeletal muscles as well as muscle coats in the walls of some digestive system organs (oral cavity, tongue, pharynx, oesophagus, rectum) and vagina
  • consists of muscle fibers

A muscle fiber

  • comprises the myosyncytium and myosatellite cells
  • is surrounded by a sarcolemma (myosyncytial plasma membrane) and a basement membrane
  • the myosyncytium contains numerous peripheral nuclei under the sarcolemma and tightly packed striated myofibrils (1-2 thousand) in central parts of the sarcoplasm (each myofibrillar length is equal to the whole muscle fiber length)
  • myosatellite cells are cambial cells on the external surface of myosyncytial plasma membrane under the basement membrane
  • muscle fiber size differs depending on anatomical features of organs: the diameter is 10-100 μm, the length ranges from several mm to 10-12 cm
  • the fibers exhibit a potential for rapid, voluntary, powerful contractions