neural plate
(noun)
a thick, flat bundle of ectoderm formed in vertebrate embryos after induction by the notochord
Examples of neural plate in the following topics:
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Establishing Body Axes during Development
- Primary neurulation begins after the neural plate forms.
- The edges of the neural plate start to thicken and lift upward, forming the neural folds.
- The center of the neural plate remains grounded, allowing a U-shaped neural groove to form.
- The dorsal part of the neural tube contains the alar plate, which is primarily associated with sensation.
- The ventral part of the neural tube contains the basal plate, which is primarily associated with motor (i.e., muscle) control.
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Gene Expression for Spatial Positioning
- In vertebrates, one of the primary steps during organogenesis is the formation of the neural system.
- The remaining cells in the center form the neural plate.
- The neural plate undergoes a series of cell movements where it rolls up and forms a tube called the neural tube .
- In further development, the neural tube will give rise to the brain and the spinal cord.
- The central region of the ectoderm forms the neural tube, which gives rise to the brain and the spinal cord.
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Organogenesis
- In vertebrates, one of the primary steps during organogenesis is the formation of the neural system.
- The remaining cells in the center form the neural plate.
- The neural plate undergoes a series of cell movements where it rolls up and forms a tube called the neural tube.
- In further development, the neural tube will give rise to the brain and the spinal cord .
- The central region of the ectoderm forms the neural tube, which gives rise to the brain and the spinal cord.
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Neural Responses to Food
- All three phases of digestive responses to food (the cephalic, gastric, and intestinal stages) are managed through enzymatic neural control.
- Each requires many enzymes and is under neural control as well.
- The first phase of ingestion, called the cephalic phase, is controlled by the neural response to the stimulus provided by food.
- This phase consists of local, hormonal, and neural responses.
- Seeing a plate of food triggers the secretion of saliva in the mouth and the production of hydrochloric acid in the stomach.
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Excitation–Contraction Coupling
- A neural signal is the electrical trigger for calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum into the sarcoplasm.
- The area of the sarcolemma on the muscle fiber that interacts with the neuron is called the motor-end plate.
- The end of the neuron's axon is called the synaptic terminal; it does not actually contact the motor-end plate.
- A small space called the synaptic cleft separates the synaptic terminal from the motor-end plate.
- As ACh binds at the motor end plate, this depolarization is called an end-plate potential.
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Growth of Bone
- The epiphyseal plate is the area of growth in a long bone.
- On the epiphyseal side of the epiphyseal plate, cartilage is formed.
- The epiphyseal plate is composed of four zones of cells and activity.
- All that remains of the epiphyseal plate is the epiphyseal line .
- (a) Epiphyseal plates are visible in a growing bone.
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Humoral, Hormonal, and Neural Stimuli
- In some cases, the nervous system directly stimulates endocrine glands to release hormones, which is referred to as neural stimuli.
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The Mitotic Phase and the G0 Phase
- A contractile ring composed of actin filaments forms just inside the plasma membrane at the former metaphase plate.
- There, the vesicles fuse and coalesce from the center toward the cell walls; this structure is called a cell plate.
- As more vesicles fuse, the cell plate enlarges until it merges with the cell walls at the periphery of the cell.
- During cytokinesis in animal cells, a ring of actin filaments forms at the metaphase plate.
- In plant cells, Golgi vesicles coalesce at the former metaphase plate, forming a phragmoplast.
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Meiosis I
- During metaphase I, the tetrads move to the metaphase plate with kinetochores facing opposite poles.
- There are two possibilities for orientation at the metaphase plate.
- In plants, a cell plate is formed during cell cytokinesis by Golgi vesicles fusing at the metaphase plate.
- This cell plate will ultimately lead to the formation of cell walls that separate the two daughter cells.
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Biogeography and the Distribution of Species
- The biological distribution of species is based on the movement of tectonic plates over a period of time.
- The geographic distribution of organisms on the planet follows patterns that are best explained by evolution in conjunction with the movement of tectonic plates over geological time.