NEW SEARCH MethDB TABLE: Tissue

Data sets 1 to 25 out of 243 found (25 data sets shown).

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Tissue: 2-cell embryo

The embryo is an early developmental stage of an animal while it is in the egg or within the uterus of the mother and consits of 2 cells. In humans the term is applied to the unborn child until the end of the seventh week following conception; from the eighth week the unborn child is called a fetus.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 195)


Tissue: 4-cell embryo

The embryo is an early developmental stage of an animal while it is in the egg or within the uterus of the mother and consits of 4 cells. In humans the term is applied to the unborn child until the end of the seventh week following conception; from the eighth week the unborn child is called a fetus.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 195)


Tissue: 8-cell embryo

The embryo is an early developmental stage of an animal while it is in the egg or within the uterus of the mother and consits of 8 cells. In humans the term is applied to the unborn child until the end of the seventh week following conception; from the eighth week the unborn child is called a fetus.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 195)


Tissue: adrenal cortex

The outer portion of the adrenal glands that produces several steroid hormones, including cortisol and aldosterone.

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Tissue: bladder

In most vertebrates, except birds, organ for the temporary storage of urine from the kidneys, connected to the kidneys by means of tubular structures called ureters. A urinary bladder is present in fish as an expansible part of the urinary duct, in amphibians and bladder-possessing reptiles (Sphenodon, turtles, most lizards) as a pocket in the cloaca. In mammals it is a greatly expandible muscular sac. The bladder of an average adult human is uncomfortably distended at a volume of around 350 millilitres (1/3 quart) of urine. In placental mammals a special duct, the urethra, leads from the urinary bladder to the exterior; it fulfills the excretory function of the more primitive cloaca. In females the urethra is separate from the genital tract. In males the vas deferens (sperm-carrying tubes) empty into the urethra, and both urine and semen pass through the urethra to reach the exterior. (from Encyclopeadia Britannica)

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 192)


Tissue: bladder - B10 cells

Clonally derived sublines of the transitional cell carcinoma cell line BL17/12.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 110)


Tissue: bladder - J82 cells

epithelial cells of a transitional cell carcinoma in urinary bladder (ATCC Number: HTB-1)


Tissue: bladder - T24 cells

epithelial cells from transitional cell carcinoma of urinary bladder (ATCC Number: HTB-4)


Tissue: blastocyst (inner cell mass)

A distinctive stage of a mammalian embryo. It is a form of blastula that develops from a berrylike cluster of cells, the morula. A cavity appears in the morula between the cells of the inner cell mass and the enveloping layer. This cavity becomes filled with fluid. The blastocyst differs from the blastula in that it is composed of two already differentiated cell types, the inner cell mass and the enveloping layer. Further differentiation produces a thin layer of cells, called the hypoblast, between the inner cell mass and the cavity. These cells contribute to the formation of the embryonic endoderm, from which derive the respiratory and digestive tracts.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 193)


Tissue: blastocyst (whole)

A distinctive stage of a mammalian embryo. It is a form of blastula that develops from a berrylike cluster of cells, the morula. A cavity appears in the morula between the cells of the inner cell mass and the enveloping layer. This cavity becomes filled with fluid. The blastocyst differs from the blastula in that it is composed of two already differentiated cell types, the inner cell mass and the enveloping layer. Further differentiation produces a thin layer of cells, called the hypoblast, between the inner cell mass and the cavity. These cells contribute to the formation of the embryonic endoderm, from which derive the respiratory and digestive tracts.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 193)


Tissue: blood

A fluid in multicellular animals that transports oxygen and nutrients to the cells and carries away waste products. In many species it also conveys hormones and disease-fighting substances. Technically, blood is a transport liquid pumped by the heart (or an equivalent structure) to all parts of the body, after which it is returned to the heart to repeat the process. Blood is both a tissue and a fluid. It is a tissue because it is a collection of similar cells that serve a particular function. These cells are suspended in a liquid matrix—called plasma—which makes the blood a fluid.

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Tissue: blood - BV173 cells

Philadelphia-positive CML (Chronic Myelogenous Leukemia) cell line.

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Tissue: blood - erythroid cells

The production of red blood cells occurs by a process called erythropoiesis whereby erythroid progenitor cells proliferate and differentiate into erythroid precursor cells. Normally, this process is highly dependent upon and regulated by a hormone produced by the kidneys called erythropoietin. Proliferating human erythroid cells are critical for the production of approximately 10E11 red blood cells during every day of adult human life. Red blood cells have the fundamental role of delivering oxygen from the lungs to the other body tissues.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 199)


Tissue: blood - HL60

HL-60 is a human promyelocytic cell line. Peripheral blood leukocytes were obtained by leukopheresis from a 36-year-old Caucasian female with acute promyelocytic leukemia.

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Tissue: blood - HL60/E8

MDR (for multidrug resistant) subline of HL60 (human promyelocytic cell line).

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Tissue: blood - KARPAS-620 cells

Myeloma cell line established from the peripheral blood of a 77-year-old woman at diagnosis of plasma cell leukemia (IgGkappa) in 1987.

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Tissue: blood - KG1A

leukemia cell line


Tissue: blood - LP-1 cells

multiple myeloma cell line


Tissue: blood - NCI H929 cells

ATCC Number:CRL-9068. Multiple myeloma cell line (B lymphocyte) established from from a malignant effusion in a 62 year old female patient

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 472)


Tissue: blood - OPM-2 cells

Multiple myeloma cell line established from a 56 year old female patient.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 471)


Tissue: blood - peripheral blood lymphocytes

Type of leukocyte (white blood cell) that is of fundamental importance in the immune system. In humans lymphocytes make up 25 to 33 percent of the total number of leukocytes. They are found in the circulation and also are concentrated in lymphoid organs and tissues, such as the spleen, thymus, tonsils, and lymph nodes, where they are most likely to encounter infectious microorganisms.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 200)


Tissue: blood - peripheral blood mononuclear cells

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Tissue: blood - peripheral white blood cells

White blood cells contain all types of leucocytes: monocytes, lymphocytes and granulocytes.


Tissue: blood - primary culture of peripheral blood mononuclear cells

Blood mononuclear cells (lymphocytes and monocytes) are separated from other blood compounds by a series of dilutions and centrifugation. Platelets, red blood cells, and neutrophils are largely depleted from the final cell sample. Cells are finally grown as a primary cell culture (in general in RPMI, 10 % FCS and interleukine 2).


Tissue: blood - RPMI 8226 cells

ATCC Number:CCL-155. Myeloma cell line (B lymphocytes) from peripheral blood of a 61 year odl male patient.

Find out more: Cross reference to (proof ID 470)


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