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- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 date_retrieved "2012-09-17" @default.
- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 external_class "VHOG:0000665" @default.
- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 ontology "VHOG" @default.
- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 source "ISBN:978-0072528305 Kardong KV, Vertebrates: Comparative Anatomy, Function, Evolution (2006) p.669 (ref.1), http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9866877 Doving KB, Trotier D, Review: Structure and function of the vomeronasal organ. The Journal of Experimental Biology (1998) (ref.2), DOI:10.1046/j.1469-7580.2001.19810077.x Smith TD, Siegel MI, Bonar CJ, Bhatnagar KP, Mooney MP, Burrows AM, Smith MA, Maico LM, The existence of the vomeronasal organ in postnatal chimpanzees and evidence for its homology with that of humans. J Anat (2001) (ref.3) , DOI:10.1002/ar.22415 Nakamuta S, Nakamuta N, Taniguchi K, Taniguchi K, Histological and ultrastructural characteristics of the primordial vomeronasal organ in lungfish. Anat Rec (Hoboken) (2012) (ref.4)" @default.
- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 source "http://bgee.unil.ch/" @default.
- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 type Axiom @default.
- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 annotatedProperty UBPROP_0000003 @default.
- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 annotatedSource UBERON_0002255 @default.
- B20500fb82fc4eadcf35c24019f4f62c9 annotatedTarget "(...) the vomeronasal organ is known only in some tetrapods. It is absent in most turtles, crocodiles, birds, some bats, and aquatic mammals. In amphibians, it is in a recessed area off the main nasal cavity. (...) In mammals possesing this organ, it is an isolated area of olfactory membrane within the nasal cavity that is usually connected to the mouth via the nasopalatine duct (reference 1); The opinions concerning the presence and functioning of the vomeronasal organ in humans are controversial. The vomeronasal cavities appear early in human foetuses. (...) Historical examination of the nasal septum revealed the presence of vomeronasal cavities in approximately 70% of adults. In contrast to the situation in other mammals, the organ is not supported by a rigid tube of bone or cartilage (reference 2); (...) the best evidence for the homology of the human VNO to that of other primates (and of mammals in general) is ontogenetic in nature, based on a common embryonic origin from a thickening (vomeronasal primordium) on the medial aspect of each olfactory pit (reference 3); (...) suggesting that lungfish possess a region homologous to the accessory olfactory bulb of tetrapods. Based on these results, it seems appropriate to refer to the recess epithelium as a primordium of the vomeronasal organ (reference 4). [debated][VHOG]" @default.