All terms in CL
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| tooth bud | UBERON_0008281 | [A knoblike tooth primordium that develops into the mature tooth and consists of enamel organ, dental papilla, and dental sac enclosing them.] |
| tooth enamel organ | UBERON_0005176 | [A circumscribed mass of ectodermal cells which bud off from the dental lamina; it becomes cup-shaped and develops on its internal face the ameloblast layer of cells that produces the enamel cap of a developing tooth.] |
| mammary duct | UBERON_0001765 | [Epithelial tube that transports milk[GO].] |
| epithelial tube | UBERON_0003914 | [Epithelial tubes transport gases, liquids and cells from one site to another and form the basic structure of many organs and tissues, with tube shape and organization varying from the single-celled excretory organ in Caenorhabditis elegans to the branching trees of the mammalian kidney and insect tracheal system.] |
| epithelium of mammary gland | UBERON_0003244 | [the epithelial layer of the luminal surfaces of the mammary gland] |
| duct | UBERON_0000058 | [A tubular structure that transports secreted or excreted substances.] |
| nipple | UBERON_0002030 | [Projection of skin containing the outlets for 15-20 lactiferous ducts arranged cylindrically around the tip.] |
| milk | UBERON_0001913 | [An emulsion of fat globules within a fluid that is secreted by the mammary gland during lactation.] |
| vagus nerve | UBERON_0001759 | [Cranial nerve that branches into the lateral (to body sense organs) and the intestino-accessorial (to the skin, muscles of shoulder, hyoid, larynx, gut, lungs, and heart).] |
| cranial nerve | UBERON_0001785 | [Cranial nerves are nerves that emerge directly from the brain, in contrast to spinal nerves, which emerge from segments of the spinal cord.] |
| viscus | UBERON_0002075 | [An organ that is located within the body cavity (or in its extension, in the scrotum); it consists of organ parts that are embryologically derived from endoderm, splanchnic mesoderm or intermediate mesoderm; together with other organs, the viscus constitutes the respiratory, gastrointestinal, urinary, reproductive and immune systems, or is the central organ of the cardiovascular system. Examples: heart, lung, esophagus, kidney, ovary, spleen.] |
| vagus nerve nucleus | UBERON_0011775 | [A cranial nerve nucleus that is associated with a vagus nerve.] |
| basal plate metencephalon | UBERON_0005239 | |
| gastrin secreting cell | CL_0000509 | [A peptide hormone secreting cell that secretes gastrin.] |
| peptide hormone secreting cell | CL_0000167 | |
| middle ear | UBERON_0001756 | [The middle ear is the air-filled cavity within the skull of vertebrates that lies between the outer ear and the inner ear. It is linked to the pharynx (and therefore to outside air) via the Eustachian tube and in mammals contains the three ear ossicles, which transmit auditory vibrations from the outer ear (via the tympanum) to the inner ear (via the oval window)[GO].] |
| ear | UBERON_0001690 | [Sense organ in vertebrates that is specialized for the detection of sound, and the maintenance of balance. Includes the outer ear and middle ear, which collect and transmit sound waves; and the inner ear, which contains the organs of balance and (except in fish) hearing. Also includes the pinna, the visible part of the outer ear, present in some mammals.] |
| enteric plexus | UBERON_0000429 | [A plexus of autonomic nerve fibers within the wall of the digestive tube, and made up of the submucosal, myenteric, and subserosal plexuses; it contains visceral afferent fibers, sympathetic postganglionic fibers, parasympathetic preganglionic and postganglionic fibers, and parasympathetic postganglionic cell bodies.] |
| autonomic nerve plexus | UBERON_0001816 | [A nerve plexus that is part of an autonomic nervous system [Automatically generated definition].] |
| enteric nervous system | UBERON_0002005 | [The enteric nervous system is composed of two ganglionated neural plexuses in the gut wall which form one of the three major divisions of the autonomic nervous system. The enteric nervous system innervates the gastrointestinal tract, the pancreas, and the gall bladder. It contains sensory neurons, interneurons, and motor neurons. Thus the circuitry can autonomously sense the tension and the chemical environment in the gut and regulate blood vessel tone, motility, secretions, and fluid transport. The system is itself governed by the central nervous system and receives both parasympathetic and sympathetic innervation[GO].] |