| Preferred Name |
anatomical boundary |
| Definitions |
Except in the case of abstracted fiat boundaries such as the midline plane of an organism, all 2D anatomical entities have a 3 dimensional projection. For example, the surface of the shell of a muscle has a distinct shape that projects into the third dimension. Note that boundaries are 2D structures. They have no thickness - and so can not be sites of gene expression or gene product localisation. For this, use boundary region terms. A non-material anatomical entity of two dimensions. Anatomical boundaries are contiguous structures. |
| ID |
http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/UBERON_0000015 |
| comment |
Except in the case of abstracted fiat boundaries such as the midline plane of an organism, all 2D anatomical entities have a 3 dimensional projection. For example, the surface of the shell of a muscle has a distinct shape that projects into the third dimension. Note that boundaries are 2D structures. They have no thickness - and so can not be sites of gene expression or gene product localisation. For this, use boundary region terms. |
| database_cross_reference |
CARO:0000010 FMA:50705 AEO:0000192 |
| has_obo_namespace |
uberon |
| id |
UBERON:0000015 |
| imported from | |
| in_subset | |
| label |
anatomical boundary |
| notation |
UBERON:0000015 |
| prefLabel |
anatomical boundary |
| textual definition |
A non-material anatomical entity of two dimensions. Anatomical boundaries are contiguous structures. |
| subClassOf |