No, muscle tissue doesn't produce any blood cells.
No. Your muscles do not produce the red blood cells. Red bone marrow produce the red blood cells.
I think not. It's from the bone marrow.
Smooth muscle tissue has a single nucleus in each cell :)
the answer is the muscle tissue ! i got the same packet haha
moves things in and out of cells
Connective Tissue
Making muscle tissue
Tissue made of cells that contract and relax to produce movement is called muscle tissue.
Tissue made of cells that contract and relax to produce movement is called muscle tissue.
Tissue made of cells that contract and relax to produce movement is called muscle tissue.
Smooth muscle tissue has a single nucleus in each cell :)
Muscle tissue and blood vessels both use fibroblasts, a precursor for the smooth muscle cells that stabilize the blood vessels. One difference is that the muscle tissue requires oxygenated blood in order to function.
the bone marrow
Blood is a tissue, because the cells in your blood are working toward the same function of tissues.
Muscle cells are smaller than muscle tissues.
The muscle cells which commonly branch are the cardiac muscle cells. The other muscles do not have any branched cells.
capillaries are then tendril like viens on the end of arteries. they allow red blood cells to get closer to muscle tissue allowing oxygen to pass into the muscle, and co2 to pass out of the muscle.
blood is made of erythrocytes (red blood cells), leukocytes (white blood cells) and platelets. your blood vessels walls are made of smooth muscle. your heart is made of cardiac muscle.
"I am not sure of names but i know that many cells make up the heart! Try to look on the Internet for your answer. Hope this helped a bit :)" You got to be kidding me... that wasn't helpful at all, but whatever. In the heart you can find: - Myocardiocytes - those are the cells performing the rhytmic contraction of the whole heart. - Endothelial cells - those are the supporting epithelial cells, insulating the chambers of the heart and the veins.