Myofibers

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Abstract

Muscle tissue is a highly specialized type of tissue, made up of cells that have as their fundamental properties excitability and contractility. The cellular elements that make up this type of tissue are called muscle fibers, or myofibers, because of the elongated shape they have. Contractility is due to the presence of myofibrils in the muscle fiber cytoplasm, as large cellular assemblies. Also, myofibers are responsible for the force that the muscle generates which represents a countless aspect of human life. Movements due to muscles are based on the ability of muscle fibers to use the chemical energy procured in metabolic processes, to shorten and then to return to the original dimensions. We describe in detail the levels of organization for the myofiber, and we correlate the structural aspects with the functional ones, beginning with neuromuscular transmission down to the biochemical reactions achieved in the sarcoplasmic reticulum by the release of Ca2+ and the cycling of crossbridges. Furthermore, we are reviewing the types of muscle contractions and the fiber-type classification.

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Cretoiu, D., Pavelescu, L., Duica, F., Radu, M., Suciu, N., & Cretoiu, S. M. (2018). Myofibers. In Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology (Vol. 1088, pp. 23–46). Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-1435-3_2

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