neuron with cell body associated with the ventral nerve cord. |
ventral cord neuron
|
ventral cord motoneuron |
WBbt:0005300
|
A chain of very large cuboidal cells forming a wide central lumen in which food arrives from the posterior pharynx, is digested, and from which waste products proceed to the rectum. Intestinal rings form in groups of two and four cells surrounding the common lumen; thus the epithelium is only one cell deep at any point, with neighboring cells firmly secured to their neighbors by apical adherens junctions. These cells have very large nuclei and many large vacuoles, yolk granules, and other inclusions; the latter increase in number and electron density as the animal ages. |
intestine
|
gut |
WBbt:0005772
|
muscle associated with hermaphrodite vulva. |
vulval muscle
|
|
WBbt:0005821
|
the feeding organ, a neuro-muscular pump in the head of the animal, used to ingest food, bacteria suspended in liquid, filter them out, grind them up and transport posteriorly into the instestine. |
pharynx
|
esophagus |
WBbt:0003681
|
Herm. specific motor neurons (die in male embryo), innervate vulval muscles, serotonergic |
HSNL
|
lineage name: ABplapppappa |
WBbt:0004758
|
Herm. specific motor neurons (die in male embryo), innervate vulval muscles, serotonergic |
HSNR
|
lineage name: ABprapppappa |
WBbt:0004757
|
one member of amphid neurons, single ciliated ending, probably chemo-sensory; project into ring via commissure from ventral ganglion, make diverse synaptic connections in ring neuropil |
ASIL
|
lineage name: ABplaapapppa |
WBbt:0003888
|
one member of Amphid neurons, single ciliated endings, probably chemo-sensory; project into ring via commissure from ventral ganglion, make diverse synaptic connections in ring neuropil |
ASIR
|
lineage name: ABpraapapppa |
WBbt:0003887
|
ganglion lies beside the nerve ring in the head, just anterior of the retrovesicular ganglion. It contains about 20 interneuron and motorneuron cell bodies that all send their neuronal processes into the ring. The cell bodies are divided into two groups by the intrusion of the excretory duct and canal. The cells are bounded by a basal lamina which physically separates them from the lateral ganglion even though they are adjacent to one another. |
ventral ganglion
|
ventral ganglia |
WBbt:0005298
|