visceral muscle [FBbt_00005070]
Muscle that moves the viscera and has only one or, commonly no attachment to the body wall. Visceral muscles differ from skeletal muscles in several respects: adjacent fibers are held together by desmosomes, each fiber is uninucleate and the contractile material is not grouped into fibrils but packs the whole fiber. Visceral muscles appear striated. The visceral musculature comprises circular and longitudinal fibers which surround the entire intestinal tract, with the exception of the recurrent layer of the proventriculus, and ducts of the reproductive system. The circular fibers derive from a bilaterally symmetrical band of mesodermal cells extending continuously throughout most of the germ band. The longitudinal fibers derive from clusters of mesodermal cells which appear during stage 12 at the posterior end of the embryo and migrate anteriorly. It is quite common to refer to visceral muscles as smooth muscles, by analogy with vertebrates; however most visceral muscles in Drosophila are actually striated (Bate, 1993) [FlyBase:FBrf0064793].
Note
This page displays the raw VFB json record for this term. Please use the link below to open the term inside the Virtual Fly Brain viewerVFB Term Json
{
"term": {
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"iri": "http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/FBbt_00005070",
"symbol": "",
"types": [
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"Cell",
"Class",
"Muscle"
],
"short_form": "FBbt_00005070",
"label": "visceral muscle"
},
"description": [
"Muscle that moves the viscera and has only one or, commonly no attachment to the body wall. Visceral muscles differ from skeletal muscles in several respects: adjacent fibers are held together by desmosomes, each fiber is uninucleate and the contractile material is not grouped into fibrils but packs the whole fiber. Visceral muscles appear striated. The visceral musculature comprises circular and longitudinal fibers which surround the entire intestinal tract, with the exception of the recurrent layer of the proventriculus, and ducts of the reproductive system. The circular fibers derive from a bilaterally symmetrical band of mesodermal cells extending continuously throughout most of the germ band. The longitudinal fibers derive from clusters of mesodermal cells which appear during stage 12 at the posterior end of the embryo and migrate anteriorly."
],
"comment": [
"It is quite common to refer to visceral muscles as smooth muscles, by analogy with vertebrates; however most visceral muscles in Drosophila are actually striated (Bate, 1993) [FlyBase:FBrf0064793]."
]
},
"query": "Get JSON for Class",
"version": "44725ae",
"parents": [
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"short_form": "FBbt_00005074",
"label": "muscle cell"
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],
"relationships": [],
"xrefs": [],
"anatomy_channel_image": [],
"pub_syn": [
{
"synonym": {
"scope": "has_broad_synonym",
"label": "smooth muscle",
"type": ""
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"pub": {
"core": {
"symbol": "",
"iri": "http://flybase.org/reports/Unattributed",
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"short_form": "Unattributed",
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"def_pubs": [
{
"core": {
"symbol": "",
"iri": "http://flybase.org/reports/FBrf0239227",
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"short_form": "FBrf0239227",
"label": "Chapman, 1998, Chapman, 1998: 229--258"
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{
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"label": "Bate, 1993, Bate, Martinez Arias, 1993: 1013--1090"
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},
{
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"iri": "http://flybase.org/reports/FBrf0089570",
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"short_form": "FBrf0089570",
"label": "Campos-Ortega and Hartenstein, 1997, The embryonic development of Drosophila melanogaster. 2nd ed. "
},
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}
]
}
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