All terms in CLO
| Label | Id | Description |
|---|---|---|
| DA03158 cell | CLO_0012264 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| DA00593 cell | CLO_0036212 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| GM17417 cell | CLO_0012263 | [ XERODERMA PIGMENTOSUM, COMPLEMENTATION GROUP C; XPC] |
| DA00592 cell | CLO_0036211 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| GM17418 cell | CLO_0012262 | [ XERODERMA PIGMENTOSUM, COMPLEMENTATION GROUP C; XPC] |
| DA03157 cell | CLO_0012261 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| ND03353 cell | CLO_0012260 | [ ISCHEMIC STROKE] |
| DA00579 cell | CLO_0036218 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| DA00582 cell | CLO_0036217 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| DA00580 cell | CLO_0036219 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| DA00573 cell | CLO_0036214 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| ND09361 cell | CLO_0012269 | [ AMYOTROPHIC LATERAL SCLEROSIS] |
| DA00572 cell | CLO_0036213 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| GM13484 cell | CLO_0012268 | [ WILLIAMS-BEUREN SYNDROME; WBS] |
| DA00581 cell | CLO_0036216 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| DA03159 cell | CLO_0012267 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| DA00574 cell | CLO_0036215 | [ DIABETES MELLITUS FAMILY SAMPLE] |
| GM17416 cell | CLO_0012266 | [ COLLAGEN, TYPE I, ALPHA-2; COL1A2 OSTEOGENESIS IMPERFECTA, TYPE IV; OI4] |
| GM05887 cell | CLO_0024221 | [ OSTEOGENIC SARCOMA] |
| osteosarcoma | EFO_0000637 | [A malignant mesenchymal tumor arising from the bone., A usually aggressive malignant bone-forming mesenchymal tumor, predominantly affecting adolescents and young adults. It usually involves bones and less frequently extraosseous sites. It often involves the long bones (particularly distal femur, proximal tibia, and proximal humerus). Pain with or without a palpable mass is the most frequent clinical symptom. It may spread to other anatomic sites, particularly the lungs., A sarcoma originating in bone-forming cells, affecting the ends of long bones. It is the most common and most malignant of sarcomas of the bones, and occurs chiefly among 10- to 25-year-old youths. (From Stedman, 25th ed)] |