neural
(adjective)
of, or relating to the nerves, neurons or the nervous system
Examples of neural in the following topics:
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Establishing Body Axes during Development
- 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.
- In the head, neural crest cells migrate, the neural tube closes, and the overlying ectoderm closes.
- In the trunk, overlying ectoderm closes, the neural tube closes and neural crest cells migrate.
- (Neural tube is in green. )
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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.
- All aspects, such as sight, sense, and smell, trigger the neural responses resulting in salivation and secretion of gastric juices.
- This phase consists of local, hormonal, and neural responses.
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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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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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Control of Muscle Tension
- Neural control initiates the formation of actin–myosin cross-bridges, leading to the sarcomere shortening involved in muscle contraction .
- In individual muscle fibers, the amount of tension produced depends primarily on the amount of cross-bridges formed, which is influenced by the cross-sectional area of the muscle fiber and the frequency of neural stimulation.
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Elimination
- As the rectum expands in response to storage of fecal matter, it triggers the neural signals required to set up the urge to eliminate.
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Adrenal Glands
- The release of epinephrine and norepinephrine is stimulated by neural impulses from the sympathetic nervous system.
- These neural impulses originate from the hypothalamus in response to stress to prepare the body for the fight-or-flight response.
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Hormonal Regulation of Stress
- If glycogen reserves were the only energy source available, neural functioning could not be maintained once the reserves became depleted due to the nervous system's high requirement for glucose.
- The glucocorticoids mobilize lipid and protein reserves, stimulate gluconeogenesis, conserve glucose for use by neural tissue, and stimulate the conservation of salts and water.
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Vertebrate Axis Formation
- In vertebrates, sonic hedgehog (Shh) and Wnt morphogenetic signaling gradients establish the dorsoventral axis of the central nervous system during neural tube axial patterning.