All terms in CL
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| gastric gland | UBERON_0000325 | [The branched tubular glands found in the mucosa of the fundus and body of the stomach which contain parietal cells that secrete hydrochloric acid and zymogenic cells that produce pepsin.] |
| gland of foregut | UBERON_0003294 | [A gland that is part of a foregut [Automatically generated definition].] |
| stomach glandular epithelium | UBERON_0006924 | [A glandular epithelium that lines the stomach. The stomach's glandular epithelium is characterized by the presence of gastric glands.] |
| cervical artery | UBERON_0012320 | [An artery of the neck] |
| positive regulation of immunoglobulin mediated immune response | GO_0002891 | [Any process that activates or increases the frequency, rate, or extent of an immunoglobulin mediated immune response.] |
| positive regulation of B cell mediated immunity | GO_0002714 | [Any process that activates or increases the frequency, rate, or extent of B cell mediated immunity.] |
| regulation of immunoglobulin mediated immune response | GO_0002889 | [Any process that modulates the frequency, rate, or extent of an immunoglobulin mediated immune response.] |
| immunoglobulin mediated immune response | GO_0016064 | [An immune response mediated by immunoglobulins, whether cell-bound or in solution.] |
| multinucleated giant cell | CL_0000647 | [A phagocytic cell formed by the fusion of macrophages, occurs in chronic inflammatory responses to persistent microorganism such as M.tuberculosis, component of granulomas. Sometimes used to refer to megakaryocytes.] |
| chronic inflammatory response | GO_0002544 | [Inflammation of prolonged duration (weeks or months) in which active inflammation, tissue destruction, and attempts at repair are proceeding simultaneously. Although it may follow acute inflammation, chronic inflammation frequently begins insidiously, as a low-grade, smoldering, often asymptomatic response.] |
| granuloma formation | GO_0002432 | [The formation of nodular inflammatory lesions, usually small or granular, firm, persistent, well-structured, and containing compactly grouped T lymphocytes and modified phagocytes such as epithelioid cells, giant cells, and other macrophages. Granuloma formation represents a chronic inflammatory response initiated by various infectious and noninfectious agents. The center of a granuloma consists of fused macrophages, which can become necrotic.] |
| deep cervical artery | UBERON_0012321 | [The deep cervical artery (Profunda cervicalis) is an artery of the neck.] |
| costo-cervical trunk | UBERON_0004688 | [The costocervical trunk arises from the upper and back part of the subclavian artery, behind the scalenus anterior on the right side, and medial to that muscle on the left side. Passing backward, it splits into the deep cervical artery and the supreme intercostal artery (or the Highest intercostal artery), which descends behind the pleura in front of the necks of the first and second ribs, and anastomoses with the first aortic intercostal (3rd posterior intercostal artery). As it crosses the neck of the first rib it lies medial to the anterior division of the first thoracic nerve, and lateral to the first thoracic ganglion of the sympathetic trunk. In the first intercostal space, it gives off a branch which is distributed in a manner similar to the distribution of the aortic intercostals. The branch for the second intercostal space usually joins with one from the highest aortic intercostal artery. This branch is not constant, but is more commonly found on the right side; when absent, its place is supplied by an intercostal branch from the aorta. Each intercostal gives off a posterior branch which goes to the posterior vertebral muscles, and sends a small spinal branch through the corresponding intervertebral foramen to the medulla spinalis and its membranes. [WP,unvetted].] |
| deep vasculature | UBERON_0035551 | [The part of the circulatory system that lies deep beneath the subcutaneous tissue layers away from the surface of the skin.] |
| negative regulation of immunoglobulin mediated immune response | GO_0002890 | [Any process that stops, prevents, or reduces the frequency, rate, or extent of an immunoglobulin mediated immune response.] |
| negative regulation of B cell mediated immunity | GO_0002713 | [Any process that stops, prevents, or reduces the frequency, rate, or extent of B cell mediated immunity.] |
| basal cell | CL_0000646 | [Undifferentiated; mitotic stem cell for other epithelial cell types; rounded or elliptical with little cytoplasm and few organelles; contain cytokeratin intermediate filament.] |
| epithelial fate stem cell | CL_0000036 | |
| pituicyte | CL_0000645 | [A cell with long processes running parallel to adjacent axons in the proximal infundibulum of the neurohypophysis. These processes form a three-dimensional network among the axons of the hypothalamic neurosecretory cells and are connected by gap junctions which provide for their metabolic coupling. This cell type constitutes most of the nonexcitable tissue in the neurohypophsis; function may include possibly acting as an intermediate in the modulation of oxytocin and vasopressin release. This cell type is highly variable in size and shape and commonly contain lipid droplets and deposits of lipochrome pigment.] |
| Bergmann glial cell | CL_0000644 | [Type of radial astrocyte in the cerebellar cortex that have their cell bodies in the Purkinje cell layer and processes that extend into the molecular layer, terminating with bulbous endfeet at the pial surface. Bergmann glia express high densities of glutamate transporters that limit diffusion of the neurotransmitter glutamate during its release from synaptic terminals. Besides their role in early development of the cerebellum, Bergmann glia are also required for the pruning or addition of synapses.] |