Smooth (organs)
Cardiac (heart muscle)
Skeletal (movement, support, strength)
Muscle cells have a nucleus just like other cells. The basic units of a muscle cell are the actin and myosin filaments that slide past each other to allow flexion and extension of your joints.
muscle cells
These cells are identical in form and function to epitheliomuscular cells; the only difference is that nutritive muscular cell processes are oriented sideways, so the myoneme, when connected, run in a circle around the polyp.
muscular system- offcourse!
Skeletal muscle tissue has elongated multinucleate cells.
Striped muscular cells with sacromeres and motor neurons.
they both have layers and cells
Muscles, tissue, cells, and more.
No. The muscular system comprises a very large number of cells, not just one specialised cell.
it doesnt! tats what sucks about our muscles!
white and red blood cells along with muscular cells.
the muscular system
connective, muscular, nervous, & epithelial.