Preferred Name |
embryo |
|
Synonyms |
embryonic organism developmental tissue developing organism |
|
Definitions |
Anatomical entity that comprises the organism in the early stages of growth and differentiation that are characterized by cleavage, the laying down of fundamental tissues, and the formation of primitive organs and organ systems. For example, for mammals, the process would begin with zygote formation and end with birth. For insects, the process would begin at zygote formation and end with larval hatching. For plant zygotic embryos, this would be from zygote formation to the end of seed dormancy. For plant vegetative embryos, this would be from the initial determination of the cell or group of cells to form an embryo until the point when the embryo becomes independent of the parent plant. |
|
ID |
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/UBERON_0000922 |
|
database_cross_reference |
http://linkedlifedata.com/resource/umls/id/C0013935 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embryo http://www.snomedbrowser.com/Codes/Details/57991002 http://neurolex.org/wiki/Category:Embryonic_organism CALOHA:TS-0229 EHDAA2:0000002 AEO:0000169 Wikipedia:Embryo MAT:0000226 ZFA:0000103 EMAPA:16039 VHOG:0001766 NCIT:C28147 EFO:0001367 OpenCyc:Mx4rwP1ceZwpEbGdrcN5Y29ycA SCTID:57991002 EHDAA2_RETIRED:0003236 BSA:0000039 BILA:0000056 MIAA:0000019 UMLS:C0013935 BTO:0000379 AAO:0011035 XAO:0000113 FBbt:00000052 http://neurolex.org/wiki/Category:Embryonic_organism MESH:D004622 OGEM:000001 EHDAA:38 FMA:69068 GAID:963 |
|
depicted by |
Wrinkledfrog:embryos.jpg https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2d/Wrinkledfrog_embryos.jpg |
|
existence ends with | ||
existence starts with | ||
external_ontology_notes |
Obsoleted in ZFA. Note that embryo is not classified as an embryonic structure - an embryonic structure is only the parts of an embryo |
|
has_exact_synonym |
embryonic organism |
|
has_obo_namespace |
uberon |
|
has_related_synonym |
developmental tissue developing organism |
|
has_relational_adjective |
embryonic |
|
id |
UBERON:0000922 |
|
imported from | ||
in_subset |
http://purl.oboInOwllibrary.org/oboInOwl/uberon/core#efo_slim http://purl.oboInOwllibrary.org/oboInOwl/uberon/core#uberon_slim http://purl.oboInOwllibrary.org/oboInOwl/uberon/core#pheno_slim http://purl.oboInOwllibrary.org/oboInOwl/uberon/core#vertebrate_core |
|
label |
embryo |
|
notation |
UBERON:0000922 |
|
prefLabel |
embryo |
|
see also | ||
textual definition |
Anatomical entity that comprises the organism in the early stages of growth and differentiation that are characterized by cleavage, the laying down of fundamental tissues, and the formation of primitive organs and organ systems. For example, for mammals, the process would begin with zygote formation and end with birth. For insects, the process would begin at zygote formation and end with larval hatching. For plant zygotic embryos, this would be from zygote formation to the end of seed dormancy. For plant vegetative embryos, this would be from the initial determination of the cell or group of cells to form an embryo until the point when the embryo becomes independent of the parent plant. |
|
subClassOf |
This ontology integrates with OntoloBridge, allowing community users to suggest additions to the public ontology. Complete the template below to submit a term request directly to the ontology maintainer.
Term Label (required)
Suggested term name. If a term can be described with multiple synonyms, only list the preferred name here.
Term description (required)
A brief definition, description, or usage of your suggested term. Additional term synonyms may be listed in this section.
Superclass (required)
The parent term of the suggested term. The parent term should be an existing entry of the current ontology. The superclass can be selected directly from Bioportal's Classes tree viewer.
References (optional)
Provide evidence for the existence of the requested term such as Pubmed IDs of papers or links to other resources that describe the term.
Justification (optional)
Provide any additional information about the requested term here.