Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Gastrulation> ?p ?o }
- Gastrulation abstract "Gastrulation is a phase early in the embryonic development of most animals, during which the single-layered blastula is reorganized into a trilaminar (\"three-layered\") structure known as the gastrula. These three germ layers are known as the ectoderm, mesoderm, and endoderm.Gastrulation takes place after cleavage and the formation of the blastula. Gastrulation is followed by organogenesis, when individual organs develop within the newly formed germ layers. Each layer gives rise to specific tissues and organs in the developing embryo. The ectoderm gives rise to epidermis, and to the neural crest and other tissues that will later form the nervous system. The mesoderm is found between the ectoderm and the endoderm and gives rise to somites, which form muscle; the cartilage of the ribs and vertebrae; the dermis, the notochord, blood and blood vessels, bone, and connective tissue. The endoderm gives rise to the epithelium of the digestive system and respiratory system, and organs associated with the digestive system, such as the liver and pancreas. Following gastrulation, cells in the body are either organized into sheets of connected cells (as in epithelia), or as a mesh of isolated cells, such as mesenchyme.The molecular mechanism and timing of gastrulation is different in different organisms. However, some common features of gastrulation across triploblastic organisms include: (1) A change in the topological structure of the embryo, from a simply connected surface (sphere-like), to a non-simply connected surface (torus-like); (2) the differentiation of cells into one of three types (endodermal, mesodermal, and ectodermal); and (3) the digestive function of a large number of endodermal cells.Lewis Wolpert, pioneering developmental biologist in the field, has been credited for noting that \"It is not birth, marriage, or death, but gastrulation, which is truly the most important time in your life.\"The terms \"gastrula\" and \"gastrulation\" were coined by Ernst Haeckel, in his 1872 work \"Biology of Calcareous Sponges\".Although gastrulation patterns exhibit enormous variation throughout the animal kingdom, they are unified by the five basic types of cell movements that occur during gastrulation: 1) invagination 2) involution 3) ingression 4) delamination 5) epiboly.".
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- Gastrulation thumbnail Blastula.png?width=300.
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- Gastrulation wikiPageExternalLink gastrulation.
- Gastrulation wikiPageExternalLink www.gastrulation.org.
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- Gastrulation wikiPageLength "17985".
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- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Amniote.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Anatomical_terms_of_location.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Animal.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Anus.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Archenteron.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Asymmetry.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Beta-catenin.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Blastocoel.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Blastocyst.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Blastula.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Blood.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Blood_vessel.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Bone.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Bone_morphogenetic_protein.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Bone_morphogenetic_protein_4.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink CDH1_(gene).
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Cartilage.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Developmental_biology.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Embryology.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Category:Gastrulation.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Cell_adhesion.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Cellular_differentiation.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Cerberus_(protein).
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Cleavage_(embryo).
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Connective_tissue.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Dermis.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Deuterostome.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Digestion.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Ectoderm.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Embryo.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Embryogenesis.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Embryological_origins_of_the_mouth_and_anus.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Endoderm.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Epiblast.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Epiboly.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Epidermis_(zoology).
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Epithelial–mesenchymal_transition.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Epithelium.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Ernst_Haeckel.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink FGF8.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Fate_mapping.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Fibroblast_growth_factor.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Fibroblast_growth_factor_receptor_1.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Gastrulation.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Germ_layer.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Hensens_Node.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Human_digestive_system.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Ingression_(biology).
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Invagination.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Involution_(medicine).
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Kollers_sickle.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Lefty_(protein).
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Lewis_Wolpert.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Liver.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Mechanisms_of_Development.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Mesenchyme.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Mesoderm.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Mouth.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Muscle.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink NODAL.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Nature_Reviews_Molecular_Cell_Biology.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Nervous_system.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Neural_crest.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Neurulation.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Nodal_signaling.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Notochord.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Organ_(anatomy).
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Organogenesis.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Pancreas.
- Gastrulation wikiPageWikiLink Placenta.