Matches in Ubergraph for { ?s <http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/UBPROP_0000008> ?o ?g. }
- UBERON_0001817 UBPROP_0000008 "Innervation is highly complex and species-specific" @default.
- UBERON_0001820 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans a system of apocrine - and merocrine sweat glands is the main method of cooling. Many other mammals rely on panting or other means as a primary source of cooling, but still use sweat glands to aid in body temperature regulation" @default.
- UBERON_0001829 UBPROP_0000008 "There are 3 pairs of major salivary glands in human and mouse" @default.
- UBERON_0001832 UBPROP_0000008 "Single lobed in mouse; largest acini of the 3 rodent salivary glands. In human and mouse, secretions are predominantly mucinous" @default.
- UBERON_0001836 UBPROP_0000008 "We classify a wide variety of not necessarily homologous fluids here. In humans, the saliva is a turbid and slightly viscous fluid, generally of an alkaline reaction, and is secreted by the parotid, submaxillary, and sublingual glands. In the mouth the saliva is mixed with the secretion from the buccal glands. In man and many animals, saliva is an important digestive fluid on account of the presence of the peculiar enzyme, ptyalin" @default.
- UBERON_0001844 UBPROP_0000008 "The association with 'lagena' in frog and fish comes from HOG, although HOG is inconsistent here, associating lagena with XAO cochlea and ZFA cochlear duct. NBK53175 says: 'In contrast, the ventrally located auditory chambers have undergone more extensive evolutionary modifications. The saccule and lagena are prominent auditory organs in fish but the saccule has a vestibular role in mammals and birds, and the lagena is absent in mammals. The primary au- ditory organ in mammals and birds is the cochlea, which has no known counterpart in amphibians and fish (Riley and Phillips, 2003)'" @default.
- UBERON_0001844 UBPROP_0000008 "the cochlea is coiled in most mammals, monotremes being the exceptions." @default.
- UBERON_0001850 UBPROP_0000008 "chelonians lack a lacrimal duct, and lacrimal/harderian secretions remain in or spill from the conjunctival sac[PMID:7559104]" @default.
- UBERON_0001866 UBPROP_0000008 "The composition of sebum varies across species. In humans, the lipid content is as follows: 25% wax monoesters, 41% triglycerides, 16% free fatty acids, 12% squalene; Sapienic acid is a sebum fatty acid that is unique to humans." @default.
- UBERON_0001881 UBPROP_0000008 "The islands of Calleja are located within the olfactory tubercle in most species; however, in primates these islands are located within the nucleus accumbens, since the olfactory tubercle is absent or extremely rudimentary in the brains of primates" @default.
- UBERON_0001882 UBPROP_0000008 "The ventral striatopallidal complex in birds corresponds closely to its counterpart in mammals, with a nucleus accumbes present in the rostral telenceaphalon. Note that in birds, a region previously called the nucleus accumbens is now recognized as the lateral part of the bed nucleus of stria terminalis.[ISBN:0471888893]" @default.
- UBERON_0001883 UBPROP_0000008 "Absent in primates" @default.
- UBERON_0001888 UBPROP_0000008 "In mammals the fibers of the dorsal lateral olfactory tract either pass under the accessory olfactory formation, or they penetrate through it separating the internal granule cells from the output cells." @default.
- UBERON_0001892 UBPROP_0000008 "In human embryonic development, the rhombomeres are present by day 29" @default.
- UBERON_0001893 UBPROP_0000008 "In mammals the cortex covers almost the whole of the cerebral hemispheres." @default.
- UBERON_0001893 UBPROP_0000008 "In ray-finned fishes and most pronounced in teleosts the roof plate of the embryonic telencephalon extends laterally with the effect that the paired alar plates forming the hemispheric walls roll out lateroventrally in a process called eversion. This is unlike the development in other vertebrate groups. [ZFA:0000079, ISBN:3764351209]" @default.
- UBERON_0001893 UBPROP_0000008 "In ray-finned fishes the inner surfaces of the lateral and ventral regions of the cerebrum bulge up into the ventricles." @default.
- UBERON_0001893 UBPROP_0000008 "In the amniotes, the cerebrum becomes increasingly large and complex. In reptiles, the paleopallium is much larger than in amphibians, and its growth has pushed the basal nuclei into the central regions of the cerebrum." @default.
- UBERON_0001893 UBPROP_0000008 "In the most primitive living vertebrates, the hagfishes and lampreys, the cerebrum is a relatively simple structure receiving nerve impulses from the olfactory bulb." @default.
- UBERON_0001893 UBPROP_0000008 "The cerebrum of birds has evolved along different lines to that of mammals, although they are similarly enlarged, by comparison with reptiles. However, this enlargement is largely due to the basal ganglia, with the other areas remaining relatively primitive in structure." @default.
- UBERON_0001893 UBPROP_0000008 "dolphins are the only species (other than humans) to have cerebra accounting for as much as 2 percent of their body weight." @default.
- UBERON_0001898 UBPROP_0000008 "all vertebrates contain a hypothalamus" @default.
- UBERON_0001905 UBPROP_0000008 "lobulated in humans, homogeneous in mouse. Calcifies with age in humans." @default.
- UBERON_0001911 UBPROP_0000008 "A mouse mammary gland contains a single duct or sinus, forming 5-10 secondary ducts" @default.
- UBERON_0001911 UBPROP_0000008 "The male Dayak fruit bat has lactating mammary glands" @default.
- UBERON_0001911 UBPROP_0000008 "The mammary glands of humans are in the thoracid/breast region. In other mammals they may be located elsewhere on the mammary ridges." @default.
- UBERON_0001928 UBPROP_0000008 "Located in the hypothalamus in amniotes[PMC4038951]" @default.
- UBERON_0001944 UBPROP_0000008 "in monotremes, undifferentiated and possesses only a single nucleus[ISBN:0471888893]" @default.
- UBERON_0001944 UBPROP_0000008 "teleost fishes exhibit hypertrophy of the pretectum[ISBN:0471888893]" @default.
- UBERON_0001944 UBPROP_0000008 "within the amniotes, this region is smaller in mammals[ISBN:0471888893]" @default.
- UBERON_0001945 UBPROP_0000008 "The tectum is a layered structure, with a number of layers that vary by species. The superficial layers are sensory-related, and receive input from the eyes as well as other sensory systems.[1] The optic tectum is one of the fundamental components of the vertebrate brain, existing across the full range of species from hagfish to human.[4] (See the brain article for background.) Some aspects of the structure are very consistent, including a structure composed of a number of layers, with a dense input from the optic nerve to the superficial layers and another strong input conveying somatosensory input to deeper layers. Other aspects are highly variable, such as the total number of layers (from 3 in the African lungfish to 15 in the goldfish[5]), and the number of different types of cells (from 2 in the lungfish to 27 in the house sparrow[5]" @default.
- UBERON_0001945 UBPROP_0000008 "The term SC is used when discussing mammals, and OT for other vertebrates[WP]" @default.
- UBERON_0001949 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans: 15% orthokeratinized, 75% parakeratinized, 10% non-keratinized; diurnal; decreased keratinization with age. Note that in FMA this is classified as keratinized squamous - this perhaps refers to the epithelium of the attached or free gingiva" @default.
- UBERON_0001958 UBPROP_0000008 "A pseudostratified epithelium, containing basal cells, stem cells of the airway, submucosal glands and cartilage rings, is limited to the trachea and large lobar airways in the mouse (Morrisey and Hogan, 2010). This more complex epithelium extends to terminal bronchioles in the human[DOI:10.1242/dev.115469]" @default.
- UBERON_0001962 UBPROP_0000008 "guts of jawless fish contains cells with lymphocyte-like morphology (Mayer 2002)." @default.
- UBERON_0001968 UBPROP_0000008 "Note that in this ontology, semen is defined as the sum of sperm and seminal fluid, where seminal fluid is defined in taxonomically generic way (see comments for UBERON:0006530)." @default.
- UBERON_0001970 UBPROP_0000008 "In many species, bile is stored in the gallbladder and upon eating is discharged into the duodenum." @default.
- UBERON_0001981 UBPROP_0000008 "annelids have blood vessels, but this class is not applicable to annelids." @default.
- UBERON_0001983 UBPROP_0000008 "Most fish lack intestinal glands that extend into the mucosa, Gadidae (Jacobshagen 1937) and Macrouridae (Geisterdoerfer 1973( have glands at the base of surface folds throughout intestine - these have been called crypts, but cell types are the same as for surface epithelium. Crypts have been described in salamander midguts (Reeder 1964) some reptiles (Luppa 1977) and some birds (Ziswiler and Farner 1972). Reptile crypts are less developed than birds and mammals, with epithelium similar to the surface. Avian crypts vary from those with absorprive and goblet cells to those that have cells with basophilic granules" @default.
- UBERON_0001987 UBPROP_0000008 "Eutherians: In eutherians, the chorioallantoic membrane of the fetus establishes intimate contact with the adjacent vascular wall of the mother's uterus to produce the placenta, a composite structure formed in part from tissues of the fetus and in part from tissues of the mother [ISBN:0073040584 (Vertebrates, Kardong)]. TODO - is taxon restriction too strict, even if we restrict def to allantoic placenta? - WP says: also found in some snakes and lizards with varying levels of development up to mammalian levels. Pough et al. 1992. Herpetology: Third Edition. Pearson Prentice Hall:Pearson Education, Inc., 2002. // See also: DOI:10.1002/jmor.11011" @default.
- UBERON_0002012 UBPROP_0000008 "In the human heart, the pulmonary trunk (pulmonary artery or main pulmonary artery) begins at the base of the right ventricle. It is short and wide - approximately 5 cm (2 inches) in length and 3 cm (1.2 inches) in diameter. It then branches into two pulmonary arteries (left and right), which deliver deoxygenated blood to the corresponding lung[WP]" @default.
- UBERON_0002019 UBPROP_0000008 "In mice, the spinal branch of this motor nerve innervates the trapezius and the sternocleidomastoid muscles. The cranial branch joins the vagus nerve and innervates the same targets as the vagus nerve" @default.
- UBERON_0002030 UBPROP_0000008 "a male mouse has no nipples - mammary tissue regresses during embryonic development" @default.
- UBERON_0002037 UBPROP_0000008 "The absence of a cerebellum in hagfishes and lampreys appears to be the only exception [to the rule that vertebrates possess the same number of brain divisions]. Both hagfishes and lampreys do possess a thin band of cells located medial to the lateral line centers of the medulla (Ronan and Northcutt, 1998), which has been interpreted as a primitive cerebellum (Larsell, 1967), but more recent experimental studies (Kishida et al., 1987; Weigle and Northcutt, 1998) fail to support Larsell's claim[http://icb.oxfordjournals.org/content/42/4/743.full]" @default.
- UBERON_0002046 UBPROP_0000008 "In fish, it is usually located below the gills and is not always divided into distinct lobes. However, in some teleosts, patches of thyroid tissue are found elsewhere in the body, associated with the kidneys, spleen, heart, or eyes" @default.
- UBERON_0002046 UBPROP_0000008 "In larval lampreys, the thyroid originates as an exocrine gland, secreting its hormones into the gut, and associated with the larva's filter-feeding apparatus. In the adult lamprey, the gland separates from the gut, and becomes endocrine, but this path of development may reflect the evolutionary origin of the thyroid. For instance, the closest living relatives of vertebrates, the tunicates and Amphioxus, have a structure very similar to that of larval lampreys, and this also secretes iodine-containing compounds (albeit not thyroxine)" @default.
- UBERON_0002046 UBPROP_0000008 "In tetrapods, the thyroid is always found somewhere in the neck region. In most tetrapod species, there are two paired thyroid glands - that is, the right and left lobes are not joined together. However, there is only ever a single thyroid gland in most mammals, and the shape found in humans is common to many other species" @default.
- UBERON_0002048 UBPROP_0000008 "respiration organ in all air-breathing animals, including most tetrapods, a few fish and a few snails. In mammals and the more complex life forms, the two lungs are located in the chest on either side of the heart. Their principal function is to transport oxygen from the atmosphere into the bloodstream, and to release carbon dioxide from the bloodstream into the atmosphere. This exchange of gases is accomplished in the mosaic of specialized cells that form millions of tiny, exceptionally thin-walled air sacs called alveoli. // Avian lungs do not have alveoli as mammalian lungs do, they have Faveolar lungs. They contain millions of tiny passages known as para-bronchi, connected at both ends by the dorsobronchi" @default.
- UBERON_0002057 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans this includes the superior and inferior phrenic arteries" @default.
- UBERON_0002063 UBPROP_0000008 "In fish, receives venous blood from the systemic circulation through paired hepatic veins, anterior jugular veins and Cuvierian ducts[PMID:20735616]" @default.
- UBERON_0002063 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans, it exists distinctly only in the embryonic heart, where it is found between the two venae cavae. In the adult, it is incorporated into the wall of the right atrium to form a smooth part called the sinus venarum, also known as the venarum sinus, which is separated from the rest of the atrium by a ridge of fibres called the crista terminalis. The sinus venosus also forms the SA node and the coronary sinus. In the embryo, the thin walls of the sinus venosus are connected below with the right ventricle, and medially with the left atrium, but are free in the rest of their extent. It receives blood from the vitelline vein, umbilical vein and common cardinal vein. It originally starts as a paired structure but shifts towards associating only with the right atrium as the embryonic heart develops. The left portion shrinks in size and eventually forms the coronary sinus and oblique vein of the left atrium, whereas the right part becomes incorporated into the right atrium to form the sinus venarmu" @default.
- UBERON_0002063 UBPROP_0000008 "In zebrafish, the sinus venosus also acts as a pacemaker and is the first to contract" @default.
- UBERON_0002064 UBPROP_0000008 "Paired in gnathostomes; with only a vestige of the right duct in the adult hagfish (21) and the left duct atrophying at metamorphosis in the lamprey (22)[PMID:20959416, S1]" @default.
- UBERON_0002080 UBPROP_0000008 "In mammals continuous with the pulmonary arteries" @default.
- UBERON_0002083 UBPROP_0000008 "Ductus venosus naturally closes during the first week of life in most full-term neonates; however, it may take much longer to close in pre-term neonates. Functional closure occurs within minutes of birth. Structural closure in term babies occurs within 3 to 7 days. After it closes, the remnant is known as ligamentum venosum" @default.
- UBERON_0002084 UBPROP_0000008 "In mammals continuous with aorta" @default.
- UBERON_0002099 UBPROP_0000008 "'Terrestrial vertebrates have divided hearts in which septae separate the oxygenated and deoxygenated blood within the pulmonary and systemic circulations'" @default.
- UBERON_0002106 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans, it is located in the left upper quadrant of the abdomen. It removes old red blood cells and holds a reserve in case of hemorrhagic shock, especially in animals like horses (not in humans), while recycling iron" @default.
- UBERON_0002106 UBPROP_0000008 "Neither hagfish nor lampreys possess what might be considered a discrete and condensed spleen. Hagfish possess dispersed lymphoid tissue within the submucosa of the intestine (96) associated with the portal vein (97), whereas lymphoid tissue is associated with the typhlosole portion of the intestine in lampreys (96)" @default.
- UBERON_0002107 UBPROP_0000008 "An organ sometimes referred to as a liver is found associated with the digestive tract of the primitive chordate Amphioxus. However, this is an enzyme secreting gland, not a metabolic organ, and it is unclear how truly homologous it is to the vertebrate liver. The zebrafish liver differs from the mammalian liver in that the hepatocytes are not clearly organized in cords or lobules and the typical portal triads are not apparent. In addition, the zebrafish liver does not have Kuppfer cells. Furthermore, a clear distinction can be made between the male and female liver in the adult zebrafish. The female hepatocytes are very basophilic (Figure 15c) as a result of the production of vitellogenin (Van der Ven et al. 2003)." @default.
- UBERON_0002107 UBPROP_0000008 "The liver is found in all vertebrates, and is typically the largest visceral organ. Its form varies considerably in different species, and is largely determined by the shape and arrangement of the surrounding organs. Nonetheless, in most species it is divided into right and left lobes; exceptions to this general rule include snakes, where the shape of the body necessitates a simple cigar-like form. The internal structure of the liver is broadly similar in all vertebrates." @default.
- UBERON_0002114 UBPROP_0000008 "In fish, the divisions of the small intestine are not as clear, and the terms anterior intestine or proximal intestine may be used instead of duodenum." @default.
- UBERON_0002114 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans, the duodenum is a hollow jointed tube about 10-15 inches (25-38 centimetres) long connecting the stomach to the jejunum. It begins with the duodenal bulb and ends at the ligament of Treitz." @default.
- UBERON_0002115 UBPROP_0000008 "The jejunum is the middle section of the small intestine in most higher vertebrates, including mammals, reptiles, and birds. In fish, the divisions of the small intestine are not as clear and the terms middle intestine or mid-gut may be used instead of jejunum.[Wikipedia:Jejunum]" @default.
- UBERON_0002116 UBPROP_0000008 "The ileum is the final section of the small intestine in most higher vertebrates, including mammals, reptiles, and birds. In fish, the divisions of the small intestine are not as clear and the terms posterior intestine or distal intestine may be used instead of ileum.[Wikipedia:Ileum]" @default.
- UBERON_0002119 UBPROP_0000008 "In some elasmobranchs, the left ovary does not mature, with only the right ovary fully developing. In the primitive jawless fish, and some teleosts, there is only one ovary, formed by the fusion of the paired organs in the embryo" @default.
- UBERON_0002125 UBPROP_0000008 "in the mouse, the lobes of the thymus are not subdivided into lobules but only in the central medulla and a peripheral cortex (i.e. there is no distinct sublobulation). In humans, the two thymus lobes are composed of many lobules of various sizes which contain follicles, each comprising a medulla and a cortex. in the rat, the thymus is partially subdivided into lobules separated by thin bands of connective tissue which are continuous with the thin connective tissue capsule.[MP]" @default.
- UBERON_0002128 UBPROP_0000008 "In mice, the superior olivary nucleus is a small cylindrical mass on the dorsal surface of the lateral part of the trapezoid body of the pons, and it is situated immediately above the inferior olivary nucleus. It receives projections from the cochlear nucleus and thus is involved in the perception of sound[GO:0021718]" @default.
- UBERON_0002128 UBPROP_0000008 "The SOC displays a significant interspecies variation, being largest in bats and rodents and smaller in primates." @default.
- UBERON_0002138 UBPROP_0000008 "present in all fishes and tetrapods" @default.
- UBERON_0002161 UBPROP_0000008 "in species with reduced hindlimbs (e.g. cetaceans) the size of this nucleus is reduced" @default.
- UBERON_0002173 UBPROP_0000008 "In human anatomy, respiratory bronchioles exists proximal to the alveolar ducts. The epithelial lining consists of smooth muscle knobs covered by nonciliated, simple cuboidal cells. The smooth muscle constricts under parasympathetic innervation and relax under sympathetic innervation" @default.
- UBERON_0002177 UBPROP_0000008 "Divides into 3 lobar bronchi in humans" @default.
- UBERON_0002178 UBPROP_0000008 "Divides into 2 lobar bronchi in humans" @default.
- UBERON_0002182 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans, histologically identical to trachea." @default.
- UBERON_0002185 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans, the main bronchus is histologically identical to trachea; 2ary and 3ary bronchi are not; epithelium becomes simple columnar, goblet cell number decreases, elastic fibers in lamina propria increases, distribution more uniform. Muscular layer between mucosa and submucosa appears. cartilage rings become discontinuous plates connected by fibrous connective tissue" @default.
- UBERON_0002188 UBPROP_0000008 "mice have few or none of these structures, with the terminal bronchioles transitioning directly to the alveolary ducts" @default.
- UBERON_0002194 UBPROP_0000008 "from its internal surface are given off a number of membranous processes or trabeculae, consisting, in man, of connective tissue, with a small admixture of plain muscle fibers; but in many of the lower animals composed almost entirely of involuntary muscle[WP]" @default.
- UBERON_0002196 UBPROP_0000008 "In contrast to mammalian vertebrates, the adenohypophysis remains in a subepithelial position and there exists no equivalent of Rathke's pouch in zebrafish" @default.
- UBERON_0002196 UBPROP_0000008 "While in most basal fish and tetrapods the adenohypophyseal anlagen invaginates to form Rathke's pouch, in teleost fish the adenohypophyseal placode does not invaginate but rather maintains its initial organization forming a solid structure in the head[NCBIBook:NBK53175]." @default.
- UBERON_0002207 UBPROP_0000008 "usually ossified in the adult human. By age 15 to 29, the xiphoid usually fuses to the body of the sternum with a fibrous joint. Unlike the synovial articulation of major joints, this is non-movable. Much the way the first seven ribs articulate with the sternum, the cartilage in the celiac plexus joins on the xiphoid process, reinforcing it, and indirectly attaches the costal cartilage to the sternum." @default.
- UBERON_0002224 UBPROP_0000008 "In many species, the diaphragm separates thoracic and abdominal cavities" @default.
- UBERON_0002227 UBPROP_0000008 "in basal early lizards, organized into 3 tonotopically organized areas, the outer areas lack a tectorial membrane[ISBN:9780387714691]" @default.
- UBERON_0002228 UBPROP_0000008 "In most vertebrates, ribs surround the chest. In some species, especially snakes, ribs may provide support and protection for the entire body" @default.
- UBERON_0002229 UBPROP_0000008 "rarely present in humans" @default.
- UBERON_0002233 UBPROP_0000008 "in some squamate lineages, the tectorial membrane may not cover the whole cochlear duct/papilla. In some lineages, the tectorial membrane is divided into units called sallets[ISBN:9780387714691]" @default.
- UBERON_0002241 UBPROP_0000008 "covers the brain dorsally in chondrichthyans" @default.
- UBERON_0002247 UBPROP_0000008 "The uterine horns are far more prominent in other animals than they are in humans" @default.
- UBERON_0002255 UBPROP_0000008 "Generally formed only in tetrapods; lungfish have rudimentary VN organs; true VN organs are not normally found in recent fishes, birds, aquatic reptiles, aquatic mammals (Bertmar 1980). Humans: Its presence in many animals has been widely studied and the importance of the vomeronasal system to the role of reproduction and social behavior (through influence on anterior hypothalamus) has been shown in many studies. Its presence and functionality in humans was controversial, though most studies agree the organ regresses during fetal development. Many genes essential for VNO function in animals (such as TRPC2) are non-functional in humans (Liman ER. Use it or lose it: molecular evolution of sensory signaling in primates. Pflugers Arch. 2006;453(2):125-31.)" @default.
- UBERON_0002264 UBPROP_0000008 "In most vertebrates, the olfactory bulb is the most rostral (forward) part of the brain. In humans, however, the olfactory bulb is on the inferior (bottom) side of the brain. The olfactory bulb is supported and protected by the cribriform plate which in mammals, separates it from the olfactory epithelium, and which is perforated by olfactory nerve axons. The bulb is divided into two distinct structures, the main olfactory bulb, and the accessory olfactory bulb" @default.
- UBERON_0002264 UBPROP_0000008 "Note that in uberon 'main olfactory bulb' is a separate class, but some ontologies may treat this as partially synonymous. The distinction may only make sense in tetrapods with a vomeronasal organ (olfactory nerves terminate in OB in fishes and in main OB in tetrapods - Butler and Hodos)" @default.
- UBERON_0002265 UBPROP_0000008 "in animals with a long snout, the olfactory tract is long, whereas it is short in short-snouted animals such as primates. In some birds the tract per se does not exist as the bulb is connected directly to the cerebral hemisphere.[ISBN:0471888893]" @default.
- UBERON_0002270 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans, Usually fully regressed before birth, its purpose is to supply nutrient to the developing lens in the growing fetus. During the tenth week of development the lens grows independent of a blood supply and the hyaloid artery usually regresses. Its proximal portion remains as the central artery of the retina. Regression of the hyaloid artery leaves a clear central zone through the vitreous called the hyaloid canal or Cloquet's canal. Occasionally the artery may not fully regress, resulting in the condition persistent hyaloid artery. More commonly, small remnants of the artery may remain. Free remnants can sometimes be seen as 'floaters'. An anterior remnant of the hyaloid artery can be seen in some people as Mittendorf's dot, a small pinpoint-like scar on the posterior surface of the lens. A posterior remnant may be seen where the artery left the optic disc, and is known as Bergmeister's papilla" @default.
- UBERON_0002275 UBPROP_0000008 "It is essential for governing some of the basic functions of higher organisms, and is one of the phylogenetically oldest portions of the brain." @default.
- UBERON_0002280 UBPROP_0000008 "Mammals have many tiny otoconia and fish have three large otoliths[ZFIN:df]" @default.
- UBERON_0002284 UBPROP_0000008 "Extended in mouse compared to human" @default.
- UBERON_0002293 UBPROP_0000008 "In humans, Joints between costal cartilages of ribs 6-9 are plane synovial joints. Articulation between costal cartilage of rib 9 and rib 10 is fibrous" @default.
- UBERON_0002304 UBPROP_0000008 "the basic trilaminar structure of the dentate gyrus is common across all species studied, with relatively minimal phylogenetic variation[PMC2492885]" @default.
- UBERON_0002314 UBPROP_0000008 "In adult humans it is present only in the mesencephalon as the inferior and the superior colliculi" @default.
- UBERON_0002323 UBPROP_0000008 "In mammals it forms the peritoneal, pleural, and pericardial cavities" @default.