Also known as somatopleure
The somatopleure is formed during embryonic development when the lateral plate mesoderm splits into two layers. The outer (or somatic) layer becomes applied to the inner surface of the ectoderm, and with it (partially) forms the somatopleure. The inner layer forms the splanchnopleure.
The somatopleure is formed during embryonic development when the lateral plate mesoderm splits into two layers. The outer (or somatic) layer becomes applied to the inner surface of the ectoderm, and with it (partially) forms the somatopleure. The inner layer forms the splanchnopleure.
The somatopleure as the combination of ectoderm and mesoderm, forms the amnion, the chorion and the lateral body wall of the embryo. Limb formation, from the somatic mesoderm, is induced by hox genes and the expression of other molecules through an epithelial-mesenchyme transition. The embryonic somatopleure is then divided into 3 sections, the anterior limb bud formation, the posterior limb bud formation and the non limb forming wall. The bud forming sections grow in size. The somatic mesoderm under the ectoderm proliferates in mesenchyme form.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).