61. |
sarcolemma
|
plasma membrane of a skeletal muscle fiber |
62. |
sarcomere
|
longitudinally, repeating functional unit of skeletal muscle, with all of the contractile and associated
proteins involved in contraction |
63. |
sarcopenia
|
age-related muscle atrophy |
64. |
sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR)
|
specialized smooth endoplasmic reticulum, which stores, releases, and retrieves Ca++ |
65. |
sarcoplasm
|
cytoplasm of a muscle cell |
66. |
satellite cell
|
stem cell that helps to repair muscle cells |
67. |
skeletal muscle
|
striated, multinucleated muscle that requires signaling from the nervous system to trigger contraction;
most skeletal muscles are referred to as voluntary muscles that move bones and produce movement |
68. |
slow oxidative (SO)
|
muscle fiber that primarily uses aerobic respiration |
69. |
smooth muscle
|
nonstriated, mononucleated muscle in the skin that is associated with hair follicles; assists in moving
materials in the walls of internal organs, blood vessels, and internal passageways |
70. |
somites
|
blocks of paraxial mesoderm cells |
71. |
stress-relaxation response
|
relaxation of smooth muscle tissue after being stretched |
72. |
synaptic cleft
|
space between a nerve (axon) terminal and a motor end-plate |
73. |
T-tubule
|
projection of the sarcolemma into the interior of the cell |
74. |
tetanus
|
a continuous fused contraction |
75. |
thick filament
|
the thick myosin strands and their multiple heads projecting from the center of the sarcomere toward,
but not all to way to, the Z-discs |
76. |
thin filament
|
thin strands of actin and its troponin-tropomyosin complex projecting from the Z-discs toward the
center of the sarcomere |
77. |
treppe
|
stepwise increase in contraction tension |
78. |
triad
|
the grouping of one T-tubule and two terminal cisternae |
79. |
tropomyosin
|
regulatory protein that covers myosin-binding sites to prevent actin from binding to myosin |
80. |
troponin
|
regulatory protein that binds to actin, tropomyosin, and calcium |
81. |
twitch
|
single contraction produced by one action potential |
82. |
varicosity
|
enlargement of neurons that release neurotransmitters into synaptic clefts |
83. |
visceral muscle
|
smooth muscle found in the walls of visceral organs |
84. |
voltage-gated sodium channels
|
membrane proteins that open sodium channels in response to a sufficient voltage change, and initiate
and transmit the action potential as Na+ enters through the channel |
85. |
wave summation
|
addition of successive neural stimuli to produce greater contraction |