bn:00029696n
Noun Concept
Categories: Gastrulation, Articles with short description, Embryology, Animal developmental biology
EN
ectoderm  exoderm  ectoblast  epiblast  Ektoderma
EN
The outer germ layer that develops into skin and nervous tissue WordNet 3.0
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EN
The outer germ layer that develops into skin and nervous tissue WordNet 3.0 & Open English WordNet
In amniote embryonic development, the epiblast is one of two distinct cell layers arising from the inner cell mass in the mammalian blastocyst, or from the blastula in reptiles and birds, the other layer is the hypoblast. Wikipedia
The ectoderm is one of the three primary germ layers formed in early embryonic development. Wikipedia
Germ layer that forms the brain, spinal cord, epidermis and more Wikidata
Embryonic inner cell mass tissue that forms the embryo itself, through the three germ layers Wikidata
The outer layer of the blastoderm; the ectoderm or epiblast. Wiktionary
Outermost of the three tissue layers in the embryo of a metazoan animal. Through development, it will produce the epidermis (skin) and nervous system of the adult. Wiktionary
Tissue layer in the embryo. Wiktionary (translation)
The outer layer of a blastula that, after gastrulation, becomes the ectoderm. Wiktionary
Biology: the outer layer of a blastula that, after gastrulation, becomes the ectoderm. Wiktionary (translation)
The outermost layer of cells in a developing embryo. Wiktionary
WordNet 3.0 & Open English WordNet
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