GO Term : GO:0001710 mesodermal cell fate commitment GO

Namespace:  biological_process Obsolete:  false
description  The cell differentiation process that results in commitment of a cell to become part of the mesoderm.

0 Cross References

0 Data Sets

1 Ontology

Name
GO

0 Ontology Annotations

27 Parents

Identifier Name Description
GO:0007275 multicellular organismal development The biological process whose specific outcome is the progression of a multicellular organism over time from an initial condition (e.g. a zygote or a young adult) to a later condition (e.g. a multicellular animal or an aged adult).
GO:0032502 developmental process A biological process whose specific outcome is the progression of an integrated living unit: an anatomical structure (which may be a subcellular structure, cell, tissue, or organ), or organism over time from an initial condition to a later condition.
GO:0030154 cell differentiation The process in which relatively unspecialized cells, e.g. embryonic or regenerative cells, acquire specialized structural and/or functional features that characterize the cells, tissues, or organs of the mature organism or some other relatively stable phase of the organism's life history. Differentiation includes the processes involved in commitment of a cell to a specific fate and its subsequent development to the mature state.
GO:0009790 embryo development The process whose specific outcome is the progression of an embryo from its formation until the end of its embryonic life stage. The end of the embryonic stage is organism-specific. For example, for mammals, the process would begin with zygote formation and end with birth. For insects, the process would begin at zygote formation and end with larval hatching. For plant zygotic embryos, this would be from zygote formation to the end of seed dormancy. For plant vegetative embryos, this would be from the initial determination of the cell or group of cells to form an embryo until the point when the embryo becomes independent of the parent plant.
GO:0009987 cellular process Any process that is carried out at the cellular level, but not necessarily restricted to a single cell. For example, cell communication occurs among more than one cell, but occurs at the cellular level.
GO:0044763 single-organism cellular process Any process that is carried out at the cellular level, occurring within a single organism.
GO:0044699 single-organism process A biological process that involves only one organism.
GO:0008150 biological_process Any process specifically pertinent to the functioning of integrated living units: cells, tissues, organs, and organisms. A process is a collection of molecular events with a defined beginning and end.
GO:0044707 single-multicellular organism process A biological process occurring within a single, multicellular organism.
GO:0032501 multicellular organismal process Any biological process, occurring at the level of a multicellular organism, pertinent to its function.
GO:0044767 single-organism developmental process A biological process whose specific outcome is the progression of an integrated living unit: an anatomical structure (which may be a subcellular structure, cell, tissue, or organ), or organism over time from an initial condition to a later condition, involving only one organism.
GO:0048856 anatomical structure development The biological process whose specific outcome is the progression of an anatomical structure from an initial condition to its mature state. This process begins with the formation of the structure and ends with the mature structure, whatever form that may be including its natural destruction. An anatomical structure is any biological entity that occupies space and is distinguished from its surroundings. Anatomical structures can be macroscopic such as a carpel, or microscopic such as an acrosome.
GO:0048869 cellular developmental process A biological process whose specific outcome is the progression of a cell over time from an initial condition to a later condition.
GO:0045165 cell fate commitment The commitment of cells to specific cell fates and their capacity to differentiate into particular kinds of cells. Positional information is established through protein signals that emanate from a localized source within a cell (the initial one-cell zygote) or within a developmental field.
GO:0009653 anatomical structure morphogenesis The process in which anatomical structures are generated and organized. Morphogenesis pertains to the creation of form.
GO:0048646 anatomical structure formation involved in morphogenesis The developmental process pertaining to the initial formation of an anatomical structure from unspecified parts. This process begins with the specific processes that contribute to the appearance of the discrete structure and ends when the structural rudiment is recognizable. An anatomical structure is any biological entity that occupies space and is distinguished from its surroundings. Anatomical structures can be macroscopic such as a carpel, or microscopic such as an acrosome.
GO:0009888 tissue development The process whose specific outcome is the progression of a tissue over time, from its formation to the mature structure.
GO:0048729 tissue morphogenesis The process in which the anatomical structures of a tissue are generated and organized.
GO:0007369 gastrulation A complex and coordinated series of cellular movements that occurs at the end of cleavage during embryonic development of most animals. The details of gastrulation vary from species to species, but usually result in the formation of the three primary germ layers, ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm.
GO:0048598 embryonic morphogenesis The process in which anatomical structures are generated and organized during the embryonic phase. The embryonic phase begins with zygote formation. The end of the embryonic phase is organism-specific. For example, it would be at birth for mammals, larval hatching for insects and seed dormancy in plants.
GO:0001704 formation of primary germ layer The formation of the ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm during gastrulation.
GO:0001707 mesoderm formation The process that gives rise to the mesoderm. This process pertains to the initial formation of the structure from unspecified parts.
GO:0048332 mesoderm morphogenesis The process in which the anatomical structures of the mesoderm are generated and organized.
GO:0007498 mesoderm development The process whose specific outcome is the progression of the mesoderm over time, from its formation to the mature structure. The mesoderm is the middle germ layer that develops into muscle, bone, cartilage, blood and connective tissue.
GO:0048333 mesodermal cell differentiation The process in which a relatively unspecialized cell acquires the specialized features of a mesoderm cell.
GO:0001710 mesodermal cell fate commitment The cell differentiation process that results in commitment of a cell to become part of the mesoderm.
GO:0060795 cell fate commitment involved in formation of primary germ layer The commitment of cells to specific cell fates of the endoderm, ectoderm, or mesoderm as a part of gastrulation.

100 Relations

Relationship
Parent Term . Identifier

Child Term . Identifier
part of GO:0048333 GO:0001710
is_a GO:0060795 GO:0001710
part of GO:0030154 GO:0001710
part of GO:0007275 GO:0001710
is_a GO:0044763 GO:0001710
is_a GO:0044767 GO:0001710
is_a GO:0048869 GO:0001710
part of GO:0001707 GO:0001710
part of GO:0048856 GO:0001710
part of GO:0001704 GO:0001710
part of GO:0048332 GO:0001710
is_a GO:0032502 GO:0001710
part of GO:0007369 GO:0001710
part of GO:0048598 GO:0001710
part of GO:0044699 GO:0001710
is_a GO:0045165 GO:0001710
part of GO:0009888 GO:0001710
part of GO:0009987 GO:0001710
part of GO:0044707 GO:0001710
is_a GO:0044699 GO:0001710
part of GO:0008150 GO:0001710
part of GO:0032502 GO:0001710
part of GO:0032501 GO:0001710
is_a GO:0009987 GO:0001710
part of GO:0048646 GO:0001710
part of GO:0048869 GO:0001710
part of GO:0048729 GO:0001710
part of GO:0009790 GO:0001710
part of GO:0044767 GO:0001710
part of GO:0044763 GO:0001710

1 Synonyms

Name Type
mesoderm cell fate commitment synonym