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smooth muscle endomysium
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UBERON_0011896 |
[Reticular tissue which surrounds a smooth muscle cell.] |
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Dicondylia
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NCBITaxon_85512 |
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endoneurial fluid
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UBERON_0011893 |
[Fluid of the ganglia and peripheral nerves that lie outside the brain and spinal cord.] |
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positive regulation of bone development
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GO_1903012 |
[Any process that activates or increases the frequency, rate or extent of bone development.] |
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lumen of vagina
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UBERON_0011894 |
[An organ cavity that is part of a vagina.] |
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negative regulation of lysosome organization
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GO_1905672 |
[Any process that stops, prevents or reduces the frequency, rate or extent of lysosome organization.] |
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negative regulation of bone development
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GO_1903011 |
[Any process that stops, prevents or reduces the frequency, rate or extent of bone development.] |
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margin of tongue
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UBERON_0011877 |
[The lateral border that separates the dorsum from the inferior surface of the tongue on each side, the two borders meeting anteriorly at the apex..] |
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tube foot
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UBERON_0008247 |
[One of the numerous external, fluid-filled muscular tubes of echinoderms, such as the starfish or sea urchin, serving as organs of locomotion, food handling, and respiration[BTO]. Tube feet consist of two parts: ampulla and podia. Ampulla contain both circular muscles and longitudinal muscle, whereas the podia contain the latter only. Thus the podia use suction to attach to the substratum[WP].] |
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muscle layer of esophagus
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UBERON_0011878 |
[A muscle layer that is part of a wall of esophagus.] |
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pyloric stomach
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UBERON_0008246 |
[The mouth of a starfish is located on the underside of the body, and opens through a short esophagus into firstly a cardiac stomach, and then, a second, pyloric stomach. Each arm also contains two pyloric caeca, long hollow tubes branching outwards from the pyloric stomach. Each pyloric caecum is lined by a series of digestive glands, which secrete digestive enzymes and absorb nutrients from the food. A short intestine runs from the upper surface of the pyloric stomach to open at an anus in the center of the upper body.] |
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ligament of sternoclavicular joint
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UBERON_0011875 |
[A skeletal ligament that is part of a sternoclavicular joint.] |
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pennate muscle
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UBERON_0008245 |
[A pennate muscle (also called a penniform muscle) is a muscle with fascicles that attach obliquely (in a slanting position) to its tendon. These types of muscles generally allow better stabilization and force production but less flexibility. Individual muscle fibers are formed into bundles of fasciculi and these bundles of fasciculi are formed into bundles of fascicles which compose the entire muscle itself. In a pennate muscle, the fascicles will form an angle with its central tendon. If all the fascicles are on the same side of the tendon, the pennate muscle is called unipennate. Examples of this include certain muscles in the manus. If there are fascicles on both sides of the central tendon, the pennate muscle is called bipennate. The rectus femoris, a large muscle in the quadriceps, is typical. If the central tendon branches within a pennate muscle, the muscle is called multipennate, as seen in the deltoid muscle in the shoulder.] |
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body of tongue
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UBERON_0011876 |
[The oral part of the tongue anterior to the terminal sulcus.] |
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upper back muscle
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UBERON_0008243 |
[A muscle of back that is part of a dorsal thoracic segment of trunk.] |
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lower back muscle
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UBERON_0008242 |
[A muscle of back that is part of a lower back.] |
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mesorchium
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UBERON_0011879 |
[The testes, at an early period of fetal life, are placed at the back part of the abdominal cavity, behind the peritoneum, and each is attached by a peritoneal fold, the mesorchium, to the mesonephros.] |
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hippocampal formation of GP94
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UBERON_0023862 |
[The combined region of AmmonÕs horn, subicular complex and dentate gyrus; only fields CA1-CA3 of the hippocampus were considered to be part of the HF, field CA4 being included in the hilus of the dentate gyrus[1].] |
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planum polare
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UBERON_0023861 |
[A portion of the superior temporal gyrus near the temporal pole in the human.] |
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echinoderm pyloric cecum
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UBERON_0008248 |
[The pyloric ceca (or digestive glands) and the cardiac stomach produce digestive enzymes in starfishes. Digested material is absorbed through the pyloric ceca for transport to the rest of the body. Each pyloric cecum extends the length of each arm.] |