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- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 date_retrieved "2012-09-17" @default.
- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 external_class "VHOG:0000437" @default.
- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 ontology "VHOG" @default.
- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 source "DOI:10.1152/physrev.00006.2003 Moorman AFM and Christoffels VM, Cardiac Chamber Formation: Development, Genes, and Evolution. Physiol Rev (2003)" @default.
- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 source "http://bgee.unil.ch/" @default.
- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 type Axiom @default.
- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 annotatedProperty UBPROP_0000003 @default.
- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 annotatedSource UBERON_0006060 @default.
- Bfb208fc094028146ad7aaeaafd4f8974 annotatedTarget "The conus arteriosus is considered a component part of the heart because it has a myocardial wall and lies within the pericardial cavity. It is a feature of the evolutionary primitive state. In amphibians it is called the bulbus cordis, a term that is also used for its equivalent in mammalian embryos. The more derived extant bony fish, like the zebrafish, do not have this cardiac compartment. They have a so-called bulbus arteriosus, which is not enclosed by cardiac muscle, but by elastic tissue and smooth muscle, and therefore is considered to be a specialization of the proximal part of the ventral aorta (256). However, similar to the mammalian condition (306, 326, 339), the bulbus arteriosus in zebrafish embryonic hearts is surrounded by myocardium that disappears with development (134, 135). The bony fish bulbus arteriosus might thus be homologous to the shark conus arteriosus and amphibian/mammalian bulbus cordis.[well established][VHOG]" @default.