Smooth muscle
Smooth Muscle
smooth muscle cells
Smooth muscle tissue has a single nucleus in each cell :)
A single positive charge in the nucleus is the proton
The word, prokaryotic, refers to cellular organisms (prokaryotes), the cells of which, have no nucleus. So, when reference is made of a prokaryote, generally it is a reference to a species that is ancient, or lower on the evolutionary tree.
it is called a eukaryote
Yes, this is true.
smooth muscle cells
The smooth muscle is an involuntary, non-striated muscle. It is divided into two sub-groups: the single-unit and multiunit smooth muscle.
Smooth muscle tissue.
They only have one or two nuclei
Smooth muscle tissue has a single nucleus in each cell :)
Skeletal muscle
They are spindle shaped and nonstriated with a single, central nucleus.
smooth muscles and cardiac muscles contain a single, centrally located nuclei, where as skeletal muscle cells are very large and contain many nuclei.
1) Whether they have striations2) Whether they are voluntary or involuntary3) Whether they are uninucleate (single nucleus) or multinucleate (more than one nucleus)
Skeletal muscles (the ones in arms, legs and other moving parts of the body) have large numbers of nuclei. They are formed during development by the fusion of many single nucleus myoblastcells . Other muscle cells, like the cardiac muscle cells in the heart or smooth cells in the gut, do not fuse and have only one nucleus. For more information see "Molecular Biology of the Cell" published by Garland Press.
it is nucleus