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negative regulation of corticosteroid hormone secretion
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GO_2000847 |
[Any process that stops, prevents or reduces the frequency, rate or extent of corticosteroid hormone secretion.] |
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postacetabular buttress
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UBERON_4100011 |
[A bony process at the distal margin of the acetabulum formed by the ischium and/or the ischial peduncle of the ilium.] |
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positive regulation of corticosteroid hormone secretion
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GO_2000848 |
[Any process that activates or increases the frequency, rate or extent of corticosteroid hormone secretion.] |
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post-glenoid process
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UBERON_4100010 |
[Distinct notch ventral to the glenoid.] |
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positive regulation of testosterone secretion
|
GO_2000845 |
[Any process that activates or increases the frequency, rate or extent of testosterone secretion.] |
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postcoracoid
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UBERON_4100013 |
[The posterior of the two coracoid elements found in basal tetrapods. Corresponds directly to the 'coracoid' of synapsids.] |
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postacetabular zone
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UBERON_4100012 |
[Region of the ilium posterior and dorsal to the acetabulum.] |
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negative regulation of glucocorticoid secretion
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GO_2000850 |
[Any process that stops, prevents or reduces the frequency, rate or extent of glucocorticoid secretion.] |
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positive regulation of glucocorticoid secretion
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GO_2000851 |
[Any process that activates or increases the frequency, rate or extent of glucocorticoid secretion.] |
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cement gland development
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GO_0071570 |
[The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the cement gland over time, from its formation to the mature structure. The cement gland is a simple mucus-secreting organ positioned at the anterior of amphibious embryos. The cement gland attaches the newly hatched embryo to a support before the hatchling can swim well or feed.] |
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anti-arrhythmia drug
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CHEBI_38070 |
[A drug used for the treatment or prevention of cardiac arrhythmias. Anti-arrhythmia drugs may affect the polarisation-repolarisation phase of the action potential, its excitability or refractoriness, or impulse conduction or membrane responsiveness within cardiac fibres.] |
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cardiovascular drug
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CHEBI_35554 |
[A drug that affects the rate or intensity of cardiac contraction, blood vessel diameter or blood volume.] |
|
bile acid
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CHEBI_3098 |
[Any member of a group of hydroxy-5beta-cholanic acids occuring in bile, where they are present as the sodium salts of their amides with glycine or taurine. In mammals bile acids almost invariably have 5beta-configuration.] |
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bile acids
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CHEBI_138366 |
[Any member of a group of hydroxy steroids occuring in bile, where they are present as the sodium salts of their amides with glycine or taurine. In mammals bile acids almost invariably have 5beta-configuration, while in lower vertebrates, some bile acids, known as allo-bile acids, have 5alpha-configuration.] |
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hydroxy-5beta-cholanic acid
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CHEBI_24663 |
[Any member of the class of 5beta-cholanic acids carrying at least one hydroxy group at unspecified position.] |
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Brodmann (1909) area 17
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UBERON_8440010 |
[A subdivision of the cytoarchitecturally defined occipital region of cerebral cortex in the human. Defined by the band of Gennari, which gives it the name striate (furrowed) area, it occupies the banks of the calcarine sulcus which are located in the cuneus and the lingual gyrus of the occipital lobe. Cytoarchitecturally it is bounded by the area 18 of Brodmann (human) which surrounds it ( Brodmann-1909 ). In the mouse ( Paxinos-2001 ) and the rat ( Swanson-1998 ) it is located on the dorsolateral surface of the cerebral hemisphere[BrainInfo].] |
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Brodmann area
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UBERON_0013529 |
[A segmentation of the cerebral cortex on the basis of cytoarchitecture as described in Brodmann-1905, Brodmann-1909 and Brodmann-10. Maps for several species were presented. NeuroNames includes only areas in the human and in Old World monkeys. Of the latter, Brodmann studied representatives of several species including guenons (one Cercopithecus mona, one Cercocebus torquatus, and one Cercopithecus otherwise unspecified), which are all closely related African species, and one macaque (Macaca mulatta) an Asian species (Brodmann-1905). The legend to the summary map in Brodmann-1909 ascribes the areas simply to Cercopithecus. Brodmann referenced the areas by name and number. The same area number in humans and monkeys did not necessarily refer to topologically or cytoarchitecturally homologous structures. In NeuroNames the standard term for human areas consists of the English translation of Brodmann's Latin name followed by the number he assigned, e.g., agranular frontal area 6; the standard terms for monkey areas are in the format: area 6 of Brodmann-1909. He mapped a portion of areas limited to the banks of sulci, e.g., area 3 of Brodmann-1909 (Brodmann-1909) onto the adjacent, visible surface. This accounts for the fact that some areas appear larger on his surface map than on maps of other authors, e.g., area 3 of Vogts-1919. (Adapted from NeuroNames).] |
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primary visual cortex
|
UBERON_0002436 |
[The visual area of the brain that is specialized for processing information about static and moving objects. The primary visual cortex, which is defined by its function or stage in the visual system, is approximately equivalent to the striate cortex, also known as Brodmann area 17, which is defined by its anatomical location.] |
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cerebral nuclei
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UBERON_8440012 |
[One of three components of the cerebrum that is a composite structure of the endbrain defined on the basis of origin from the ventricular ridge of the embryonic Encephalon. It consists of the extended striatum and the extended pallidum.] |
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ventrolateral preoptic nucleus
|
UBERON_8440014 |
[A small cluster of neurons situated in the anterior hypothalamus, sitting just above and to the side of the optic chiasm in the brain of humans and other animals.] |