GO:0002119
JSON
nematode larval development
Biological Process
Definition (GO:0002119 GONUTS page)
The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (for example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew.
Ancestor Chart
Child Terms
This table lists all terms that are direct descendants (child terms) of GO:0002119
Child Term | Relationship to GO:0002119 |
---|---|
negative regulation of nematode larval development
|
negatively_regulates |
positive regulation of nematode larval development
|
positively_regulates |
regulation of nematode larval development
|
regulates |
dauer larval development
|
is_a |
vulval development
|
part_of |
Taxon Constraints
The use of this term should conform to the following taxon constraints:
Ancestor GO ID | Ancestor GO Term Name | Relationship | Taxon ID | Taxon | Reference(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GO:0002119 | nematode larval development | Only in Taxon | 33213 | Bilateria |
More information on taxon constraints in GO is available here
Co-occurring Terms
These tables show the number of times the term listed in the table has been co-annotated.
No co-occurrence statistics for GO:0002119 based on ALL annotations
The top 100 of 1,461 co-occurring terms
Co-occurring Term | PR | S% | #Together | #Compared |
---|---|---|---|---|
nematode larval development
|
145,595.05 | 100.00 | 1,361 | 1,361 |
embryo development ending in birth or egg hatching
|
17,891.94 | 9.25 | 371 | 3,019 |
positive regulation of vulval development
|
48,337.56 | 5.43 | 83 | 250 |
body morphogenesis
|
37,051.07 | 4.53 | 71 | 279 |
egg-laying behavior
|
22,420.53 | 4.49 | 81 | 526 |
nematode male tail tip morphogenesis
|
27,095.85 | 4.44 | 75 | 403 |
vulval development
|
27,002.59 | 4.39 | 74 | 399 |
dauer larval development
|
24,430.92 | 4.28 | 74 | 441 |
positive regulation of growth rate
|
32,730.67 | 3.72 | 58 | 258 |
regulation of mesodermal cell fate specification
|
31,290.16 | 3.18 | 49 | 228 |
Totals | 4342 | 79539 |
No co-occurrence statistics for GO:0002119 based on MANUAL annotations
The top 100 of 1,165 co-occurring terms
Co-occurring Term | PR | S% | #Together | #Compared |
---|---|---|---|---|
nematode larval development
|
5,114.25 | 100.00 | 276 | 276 |
embryo development ending in birth or egg hatching
|
841.47 | 12.28 | 90 | 547 |
reproductive process
|
1,290.08 | 7.80 | 28 | 111 |
egg-laying behavior
|
1,158.70 | 7.73 | 29 | 128 |
regulation of locomotion
|
1,239.82 | 6.84 | 24 | 99 |
positive regulation of growth rate
|
2,130.94 | 6.58 | 20 | 48 |
nematode male tail tip morphogenesis
|
1,263.52 | 6.18 | 21 | 85 |
vulval development
|
1,214.63 | 5.64 | 19 | 80 |
positive regulation of vulval development
|
1,859.73 | 5.26 | 16 | 44 |
positive regulation of multicellular organism growth
|
484.30 | 4.85 | 25 | 264 |
Totals | 1214 | 15961 |
Change Log
- All changes
- All changes
- Term
- Term
- Definition / Synonyms
- Definition / Synonyms
- Relationships
- Relationships
- Cross-references
- Cross-references
- Other
- Other
Timestamp | Action | Category | Detail |
---|---|---|---|
2016-03-20 | Deleted | RELATION | is a GO:0048856 (anatomical structure development) |
2015-12-09 | Added | CONSTRAINT | in_taxon NCBITaxon:33213 (Bilateria) |
2015-04-24 | Added | RELATION | is a GO:0048856 (anatomical structure development) |
2009-07-11 | Deleted | SYNONYM | larval development (sensu Nematoda) |
2009-07-11 | Deleted | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (fr example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2009-07-11 | Added | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (for example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2008-05-13 | Added | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (fr example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2008-05-12 | Deleted | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (fr example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2008-04-01 | Updated | RELATION | is a GO:0002164 (larval development) |
2007-12-27 | Updated | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (fr example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
Timestamp | Action | Category | Detail |
---|---|---|---|
2007-12-14 | Updated | TERM | nematode larval development |
2007-01-18 | Updated | TERM | larval development (sensu Nematoda) |
2007-01-15 | Updated | TERM | larval development (sensu the Nematoda research community) |
2001-05-16 | Added | TERM | larval development (sensu Nematoda) |
Timestamp | Action | Category | Detail |
---|---|---|---|
2009-07-11 | Deleted | SYNONYM | larval development (sensu Nematoda) |
2009-07-11 | Deleted | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (fr example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2009-07-11 | Added | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (for example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2008-05-13 | Added | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (fr example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2008-05-12 | Deleted | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (fr example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2007-12-27 | Updated | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the nematode larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. Nematode larval development begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva (L1) and ends with the end of the last larval stage (fr example the fourth larval stage (L4) in C. elegans). Each stage of nematode larval development is characterized by proliferation of specific cell lineages and an increase in body size without alteration of the basic body plan. Nematode larval stages are separated by molts in which each stage-specific exoskeleton, or cuticle, is shed and replaced anew. |
2007-12-14 | Added | SYNONYM | larval development (sensu Nematoda) |
2005-07-06 | Updated | DEFINITION | The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. This begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva and ends with the end of the last larval stage (e.g. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. As in, but not restricted to, the roundworms (Nematoda, ncbi_taxonomy_id:6231). |
2005-06-16 | Updated | DEFINITION | The process aimed at the progression of the larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. This begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva and ends with the end of the last larval stage (e.g. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. As in, but not restricted to, the roundworms (Nematoda, ncbi_taxonomy_id:6231). |
2004-07-18 | Updated | DEFINITION | Processes aimed at the progression of the larva over time, from its formation to the mature structure. This begins with the newly hatched first-stage larva and ends with the end of the last larval stage (e.g. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. As in, but not restricted to, the roundworms (Nematoda, ncbi_taxonomy_id:6231). |
2004-03-13 | Updated | DEFINITION | Development from the newly hatched first-stage larva to the end of the last larval stage (e.g. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. As in, but not restricted to, the roundworms (Nematoda, ncbi_taxonomy_id:6231). |
2004-02-25 | Updated | DEFINITION | Development from the newly hatched first-stage larva to the end of the last larval stage (eg. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. As in, but not restricted to, the roundworms (Nematoda, ncbi_taxonomy_id:6231). |
2004-02-24 | Updated | DEFINITION | Development from the newly hatched first-stage larva to the end of the last larval stage (eg. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. As in, but not restricted to, the roundworms (Nematoda, ncbi_taxonomy_id:6231). |
2003-10-18 | Updated | DEFINITION | Development from the newly hatched first-stage larva to the end of the last larval stage (eg. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. |
2003-04-24 | Updated | DEFINITION | Development from the newly hatched first-stage larva to the end of the last larval stage (e. g. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. |
2003-04-12 | Updated | DEFINITION | Development from the newly hatched first-stage larva to the end of the last larval stage (e.g. fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. |
2002-11-27 | Added | DEFINITION | Development from the newly hatched first-stage larva to the end of the last larval stage (e.g., fourth-stage in C. elegans) before molting to adulthood. |
Timestamp | Action | Category | Detail |
---|---|---|---|
2016-03-20 | Deleted | RELATION | is a GO:0048856 (anatomical structure development) |
2015-04-24 | Added | RELATION | is a GO:0048856 (anatomical structure development) |
2008-04-01 | Updated | RELATION | is a GO:0002164 (larval development) |
Timestamp | Action | Category | Detail |
---|
Timestamp | Action | Category | Detail |
---|---|---|---|
2015-12-09 | Added | CONSTRAINT | in_taxon NCBITaxon:33213 (Bilateria) |
Not found :(
Sorry, but the Term you were trying to view does not exist.
Reported error:
It looks like this may have been caused by:
- a mistyped URL
- an out-of-date link