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{"target":"http://pubannotation.org/docs/sourcedb/PMC/sourceid/4548005","sourcedb":"PMC","sourceid":"4548005","source_url":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/4548005","text":"The gray short-tailed opossum (Monodelphis domestica), which is the experimental animal of this study, belongs to the marsupials, as do the kangaroo and koala, but the bag-shaped marsupium is not present, and a portion of the skin of the hypogastric region becomes a substitute for the marsupium. Because the opossum cannot rear a fetus in the uterus, because the placenta is unripe, the animal delivers a newborn baby equivalent to a premature infant state by postpregnancy, equivalent to about 14 days after conception in mouse [13]. Opossums are also advantageous for the experimental animal because of production a large number of young.","tracks":[{"project":"2_test","denotations":[{"id":"25912322-7893485-29848302","span":{"begin":531,"end":533},"obj":"7893485"}],"attributes":[{"subj":"25912322-7893485-29848302","pred":"source","obj":"2_test"}]},{"project":"MyTest","denotations":[{"id":"25912322-7893485-29848302","span":{"begin":531,"end":533},"obj":"7893485"}],"namespaces":[{"prefix":"_base","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/testbase"},{"prefix":"UniProtKB","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprot/"},{"prefix":"uniprot","uri":"https://www.uniprot.org/uniprotkb/"}],"attributes":[{"subj":"25912322-7893485-29848302","pred":"source","obj":"MyTest"}]}],"config":{"attribute types":[{"pred":"source","value type":"selection","values":[{"id":"2_test","color":"#93eca4","default":true},{"id":"MyTest","color":"#ec939b"}]}]}}