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- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 date_retrieved "2012-09-17" @default.
- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 external_class "VHOG:0000088" @default.
- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 ontology "VHOG" @default.
- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 source "DOI:10.1159/000057571 Reh TA, Fischer AJ, Stem cells in the vertebrate retina. Brain Behav Evol (2001)" @default.
- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 source "http://bgee.unil.ch/" @default.
- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 type Axiom @default.
- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 annotatedProperty UBPROP_0000003 @default.
- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 annotatedSource UBERON_0003065 @default.
- B08eba9b0d00df1377be7ad4af7934331 annotatedTarget "The retina of all vertebrates develops via similar mechanisms. Toward the end of retinal histogenesis, proliferating progenitors and newly generated cells are confined to peripheral regions of the retina. In fish and amphibians, this region is maintained after embryonic development and becomes the CMZ (ciliary margin zone). A CMZ exists in birds but compared to that of fish and amphibians this region produces much less new retina as the globe of the eye expands postnatally. At least some of the molecular mechanisms that regulate the addition of new cells in this zone appear to have been conserved from fish to birds.[well established][VHOG]" @default.