首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 406 毫秒
1.
W J Krause  J H Cutts 《Acta anatomica》1985,123(3):156-171
For the first 9 days of gestation, opossum embryos float in uterine secretions, separated from maternal tissues by a shell membrane. Each embryo is part of the wall of its hollow embryonic sphere. By the 10th day of development, the embryo becomes enveloped by both the amnion and yolk-sac. The yolk-sac consists of vascular and non-vascular portions and, together with the surrounding trophectoderm (trophoblast), forms the yolk-sac placenta of the opossum: the allantois does not contribute to formation of the placenta. The vascular portion of the yolk-sac placenta establishes an intimate relationship with the uterine epithelium soon after loss of the shell membrane. The yolk-sac placenta is non-invasive. Cells of the trophoblast exhibit numerous microvilli, an apical endocytic complex and the lateral and basal cell membrane are elaborately folded. These features suggest a cell that is active in the transport of materials. Junctional complexes between cells of the trophoblast and uterine epithelium were not observed. The uterine epithelium changes from ciliated pseudostratified columnar with few infoldings of lateral and basal cell membranes, to non-ciliated simple columnar in which these membranes show elaborate infoldings. The cells show numerous inclusions and mitochondria are polarized to the basal half of the cell. These features suggest a cell that also is active in the transport of materials.  相似文献   

2.
Synopsis Placental viviparity has evolved inScoliodon taticaudus to a degree that rivals some eutherian mammals. Its eggs are the smallest known of any shark. They have a diameter of 1 mm, a dry weight of 0.0654 ± 0.0100 mg and are nearly yolk-free. Implantation takes place at an early (3 mm) stage of development, and gestation is short (5–6 months). Comparison of the dry weight of the egg (0.065 mg) with the estimated dry weights of a mid-late term 90 mm embryo (910 mg) and a 152 mm neonate (3815.4 mg) reveals weight changes of 14219 × and 58338 ×, respectively. Its normalized brood weight, a measure of maternal nutrient investment, is 49.5 g · kg–1 female body weight for a six-month gestation. Comparisons with other species of placental and nonplacental sharks show thatS. laticaudus has a highly advanced form of matrotrophy. Maternal nutrients appear to be acquired by placental transport and by imbibition of uterine fluid. Hemotrophic placental nutrient transfer occurs across a unique uterine implantation site, termed the trophonematous cup, in which maternal blood appears to bathe the outer epithelium of the embryonic yolksac placenta. The latter is solid and filled with a three-dimensional network of capillaries and many free interstitial cells. The umbilical stalk contains the vitelline vessels but lacks a yolk duct. Its surface is amplified by many long, villous appendiculae, which consist of a vascular core that ramifies into a massive surface capillary network invested by a simple squamous epithelium. The appendiculae ofS. laticaudus most likely are sites of gas exchange and possibly the uptake of small molecules. They are unlike the appendiculae described in any other placental shark and exhibit design principles similar to those of the uterine trophonemata of matrotrophic rays.  相似文献   

3.
During ontogeny, the yolk sac of some viviparous sharks differentiates into a yolk sac placenta that persists to term. The placenta is non-invasive and non-deciduate. Hematrophic transport is the major route of nutrient transfer from mother to fetus. The placental unit consists of: (1) an umbilical stalk; (2) the smooth, proximal portion of the placenta; (3) the distal, rugose portion; (4) the egg envelope; and (5) the maternal uterine tissues. Exchange of metabolites is effected through the intervening egg envelope. The distal rugose portion of the placenta is the fetal attachment site. It consists of: (1) surface epithelial cells; (2) a collagenous stroma with vitelline capillaries; and (3) an innermost boundary cell layer. The columnar surface epithelial cells are closely apposed to the inner surface of the egg envelope. Wide spaces occur between the lateral margins of adjacent cells. Surface epithelial cells contain an extensive apical canalicular-tubular system and many whorl-like inclusions in their basal cytoplasm. Capillaries of the vitelline circulation are closely situated to these cells. A well-developed collagenous stroma separates the surface epithelium from an innermost boundary cell layer. In vitro exposure of full-term placentae to solutions of trypan blue and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) reveals little uptake by the smooth portion of the placenta but rapid absorption by the surface epithelial cells of the distal, rugose portion. HRP enters these cells by an extensive apical system of smooth-walled membranous anastomosing canaliculi and tubules. Prominent whorl-like inclusions that occupy the basal cytoplasm of the surface cells, adjacent to the pinocytotically active endothelium of the vitelline capillaries, are hypothesized to be yolk proteins that are transferred from the mother to embryo throughout gestation.  相似文献   

4.
Virginia striatula is a viviparous snake with a complex pattern of embryonic nutrition. Nutrients for embryonic development are provided by large, yolked eggs, supplemented by placental transfer. Placentation in this species is surprisingly elaborate for a predominantly lecithotrophic squamate reptile. The embryonic-maternal interface consists of three structurally distinct areas, an omphalallantoic placenta and a regionally diversified chorioallantoic placenta. The chorioallantoic placenta over the embryonic hemisphere (paramesometrial region) of the egg, features close apposition of embryonic and uterine blood vessels because of the attenuate form of the interceding epithelial cells. The periphery of the chorioallantoic placenta, which is adjacent to the omphalallantoic placenta, is characterized by a simple cuboidal uterine epithelium apposed to a stratified cuboidal chorionic epithelium. There are no sites with attenuate epithelial cells and close vascular apposition. The morphology of the omphalallantoic placenta is similar to that of the peripheral chorioallantoic placenta, except that the height of uterine epithelial cells is greater and allantoic blood vessels are not associated with the embryonic epithelium. The functional capabilities of the three placental regions are not known, but structural characteristics suggest that the omphalallantoic placenta and peripheral zone of the chorioallantoic placenta are sites of nutritional provision via histotrophy. The paramesometrial region of the chorioallantoic placenta is also nutritive, in addition to functioning as the primary embryonic respiratory system. The structure of the chorioallantoic placenta of V. striatula is a new placental morphotype for squamate reptiles that is not represented by a classic model for the evolution of reptilian placentation.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Surface topography and cross-sections of the placental membranes were examined by scanning electron microscopy in two species of Thamnophis. The chorionic epithelium of the chorioallantoic placenta consists of broad, squamous cells that lack surface specializations. The apposed uterine epithelium contains ciliated cells and larger, nonciliated cells. Neither the epithelium of the chorion nor that of the uterus is eroded; thus, underlying capillaries are not exposed to the luminal surface. In both the omphaloplacenta and the omphalallantoic placenta, epithelium of the omphalopleure consists of brush-border cells bearing prominent microvilli, interspersed with cells bearing minuscule microvilli. These surface epithelial cells are joined at their apices and their lateral surfaces are extensively sculpted by intercellular channels, presenting the appearance of an epithelium specialized for absorption. Deep to the epithelium lie the yolk spheres of the isolated yolk mass, interspersed with endodermal cells. Surface topography of the uterine epithelia of the omphaloplacenta and omphalallantoic placenta is relatively unspecialized. The acellular shell membrane separates maternal and fetal tissues in each of the three placental types. Marked differences in surface features of the chorioallantois and omphalopleure probably reflect different roles of these membranes in gas exchange and transfer of water and nutrients.  相似文献   

7.
The omphalallantoic placenta is a complex organ that is unique to viviparous squamates. Using transmission EM and light microscopy, we examined this placenta in garter snakes in order to understand its structural organization and functional capabilities. The omphalallantoic placenta is formed from the uterine lining and the bilaminar omphalopleure, the latter of which is associated with the isolated yolk mass and allantois. A thin shell membrane separates the fetal and maternal tissues throughout gestation. The uterine epithelium contains cuboidal cells with large droplets or granules and appears to be secretory. Epithelium of the omphalopleure is specialized for absorption and contains cells with prominent microvilli and others with large cytoplasmic droplets or granules. The brush-border cells are rich in mitochondria and Golgi bodies and interdigitate extensively with adjacent cells, forming elaborate intercellular canaliculi. Their morphology is consistent with their proposed role in sodium-coupled water movement. During development, the isolated yolk mass becomes depleted as yolk droplets are digested by cells of the omphalopleure and allantois. However, the allantois does not fuse to or vascularize the inner face of the omphalopleure. Consequently, the distance between fetal and maternal circulatory systems remains large (about 250-300 microm), precluding efficient gas exchange and hemotrophic transfer. The morphology of the omphalallantoic placenta strongly suggests that it functions in nutrient transfer through uterine secretion and fetal absorption.  相似文献   

8.
The microvascularization of the collared peccary (Tayassu tajacu) placenta was studied by vascular casts and immunolocalization of α-smooth muscle actin and vimentin, to identify the three dimensional organization and vascular flow interrelation in the microvasculature between the maternal and fetal compartments of the placentae. The immunolocalization of vimentin in the vascular endothelium and in the smooth muscle cells of blood vessels showed indented capillaries along the uterine epithelium and the trophoblast at the sides of complementary maternal and fetal microfolds, or rugae. This confers the three-dimensional structure observed in vascular casts. On the maternal side, casts demonstrated uterine folds coated by with primary and secondary ridges, and by areolae dispersed between these ridges. The arteriole runs through the center/middle of ridges, branching at the top into a microvascular network wall in a basket-like fashion. At the base of these baskets venules were formed. On the fetal side, arterioles branched centrally in the fetal rugae into a capillary network in a bulbous form, complementary to the opposite maternal depressions forming the baskets. At the base of the bulbous protrusions, the fetal venules arise. The blood vessel orientation in the materno-fetal interface of the placentae of collared peccaries suggests a blood flow pattern of the type countercurrent to cross current. The same pattern has been reported in domestic swine demonstrating that, even after 38 million years, the Tayassuidae and Suidae families exhibit similar placental morphology, which is here characterized at the microvascular level.  相似文献   

9.
The left ovary of the bonnethead shark, Sphyrna tiburo, is rudimentary, and the right ovary supplies both oviducts which share a common ostium situated in the falciform ligament. Preceding ovulation the nidamental gland of each oviduct hypertrophies and the caudal two-thirds of each oviduct is modified to form a uterus. In the Florida-Caribbean area Sphyrna tiburo probably mates in March and 3–7 eggs are fertilized in the vicinity of the nidamental gland of each oviduct. The developing embryo is nourished during the first 3–4 months of gestation by yolk stored in its extensive yolk sac. Approximately three and one-half months after fertilization, the distal portion of the yolk sac becomes convoluted and interdigitates with deep folds in the uterine wall to form a yolk-sac placenta. As the placenta develops, the maternal uterine epithelium is reduced from columnar cells to squamous cells, and the foetal yolk-sac epithelium is reduced from columnar and cuboidal cells to squamous cells. Exchange between the maternal and foetal blood systems takes place through maternal endothelium, reduced maternal epithelium, egg-case membrane, reduced foetal epithelium, and foetal endothelium.  相似文献   

10.
In the four-eyed fish, Anableps (Atheriniformes, Anablepidae), eggs are fertilized and embryos develop to term within the ovarian follicles. Development is highly matrotrophic. During gestation, the largest term embryo of A. anableps examined had grown to a total length of 51 mm and attained a dry weight of 149 mg. The postfertilization weight increase is 298,000%. The largest term embryo of A. dowi examined had grown to a total length of 77 mm and attained a dry weight of 910 mg. The postfertilization weight increase is 843,000%. Embryonic weight increases result from nutrient transfer across the follicular placenta. This structure is formed by apposition of the maternal follicular epithelium to absorptive surface cells of the embryo's pericardial trophoderm. The latter, a ventral ramification of the pericardial somatopleure, replaces the yolk sac during early gestation. The external surface of the pericardial trophoderm develops hemispherical projections, termed vascular bulbs. Within each bulb, the vascular plexus of the trophoderm expands to form a blood sinus. Cells of the external surface of the bulbs possess microplicae. Microvilli are absent. During middle to late gestation, the juxtaembryonic follicular epithelium differentiates into two regions. One region consists of shallow, pitlike depressions within which vascular bulbs interdigitate in a “ball and socket” arrangement. Follicular pits are formed by the curvilinear distortion of the apical surfaces of follicle cells. The second region in contact with the dorsal and lateral surfaces of the embryo, is comprised of villous extensions of the hypertrophied follicular epithelium. In both regions, follicle cells appear to constitute a transporting rather than a secretory epithlium. In terms of percentage of weight increase, the follicular placenta of Anableps appears to be the most efficient adaptation for maternal-embryonic nutrient transfer in teleost fishes and closely approaches the efficiency (1.2 × 106%) of oophagy and embryonic cannibalism in lamnoid sharks.  相似文献   

11.
Rat gestation sites were examined on days 7 through 9 of pregnancy by light microscopy and transmission and scanning electron microscopy to determine the extent of vascular modifications in the vicinity of the mesometrial part of the implantation chamber (mesometrial chamber). At a later time, the mesometrial chamber is, in conjunction with the uterine lumen, the site of chorioallantoic placenta formation. On day 7, in the vicinity of the mesometrial chamber, vessels derived from a subepithelial capillary plexus and venules draining the plexus were dilating. By early day 8, this network of thin-walled dilated vessels (sinusoids) was further enlarged and consisted primarily of hypertrophied endothelial cells with indistinct basal laminas. Sinusoids were frequently close to the mesometrial chamber's luminal surface which was devoid of epithelial cells but was lined by decidual cell processes and extracellular matrix. By late day 8, cytoplasmic projections of endothelial cells extended between healthy-appearing decidual cells and out onto the mesometrial chamber's luminal surface, and endothelial cells were sometimes found on the luminal surface indicating that endothelial cells were migrating. The presence of maternal blood cells in the mesometrial chamber lumen suggested that there was continuity between the chamber and blood-vessel lumens. On day 9, the mesometrial chamber was completely lined with hypertrophied endothelial cells, and sinusoid lumens were clearly continuous with the lumen of the mesometrial chamber. Mesometrial sinusoids and possibly the mesometrial chamber lumen were continuous with vessels in vicinity of the uterine lumen that were fed by mesometrial arterial vessels. Clearing of the mesometrial chamber lumen during perfusion fixation via the maternal vasculature indicated the patency of this luminal space and its confluence with mesometrial arterial vessels and sinusoids. The conceptus occupied an antimesometrial position in the implantation chamber on days 7 through 9, and it was not in direct contact with uterine tissues in the vicinity of the mesometrial chamber. These observations suggest that angiogenesis, not trophoblast invasion or decidual cell death, plays a major role in the opening of maternal vessels into the mesometrial chamber lumen before the formation of the chorioallantoic placenta.  相似文献   

12.
We used scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) to describe the complete ontogeny of simple placentation and the development of both the yolk sac placentae and chorioallantoic placentae from nonreproductive through postparturition phases in the maternal uterine epithelium of the Australian skink, Eulamprus tympanum. We chose E. tympanum, a species with a simple, noninvasive placenta, and which we know, has little net nutrient uptake during gestation to develop hypotheses about placental function and to identify any difference between the oviparous and viviparous conditions. Placental differentiation into the chorioallantoic placenta and yolk sac placenta occurs from embryonic Stage 29; both placentae are simple structures without specialized features for materno/fetal connection. The uterine epithelial cells are not squamous as previously described by Claire Weekes, but are columnar, becoming increasingly attenuated because of the pressure of the impinging underlying capillaries as gestation progresses. When the females are nonreproductive, the luminal uterine surface is flat and the microvillous cells that contain electron-dense vesicles partly obscure the ciliated cells. As vitellogenesis progresses, the microvillous cells are less hypertrophied than in nonreproductive females. After ovulation and fertilization, there is no regional differentiation of the uterine epithelium around the circumference of the egg. The first differentiation, associated with the chorioallantoic placentae and yolk sac placentae, occurs at embryonic Stage 29 and continues through to Stage 39. As gestation proceeds, the uterine chorioallantoic placenta forms ridges, the microvillous cells become less hypertrophied, ciliated cells are less abundant, the underlying blood vessels increase in size, and the gland openings at the uterine surface are more apparent. In contrast, the yolk sac placenta has no particular folding with cells having a random orientation and where the microvillous cells remain hypertrophied throughout gestation. However, the ciliated cells become less abundant as gestation proceeds, as also seen in the chorioallantoic placenta. Secretory vesicles are visible in the uterine lumen. All placental differentiation and cell detail is lost at Stage 40, and the uterine structure has returned to the nonreproductive condition within 2 weeks. Circulating progesterone concentrations begin to rise during late vitellogenesis, peak at embryonic Stages 28-30, and decline after Stage 35 in the later stages of gestation. The coincidence between the time of oviposition and placental differentiation demonstrates a similarity during gestation in the uterus between oviparous and simple placental viviparous squamates.  相似文献   

13.
Placental membranes mediate maternal‐fetal exchange in all viviparous reptilian sauropsids. We used scanning electron microscopy to examine the placental interface in the mountain spiny lizard, Sceloporus jarrovi (Phrynosomatidae). From the late limb bud stage until birth, the conceptus is surrounded by placental membranes formed from the chorioallantois and yolk sac omphalopleure. The chorioallantois lies directly apposed to the uterine lining with no intervening shell membrane. Both fetal and maternal sides of the chorioallantoic placenta are lined by continuous layers of flattened epithelial cells that overlie dense capillary networks. The chorioallantoic placenta shows specializations that enhance respiratory exchange, as well as ultrastructural evidence of maternal secretion and fetal absorption. The yolk sac placenta contains enlarged fetal and maternal epithelia with specializations for histotrophic nutrient transfer. This placenta lacks intrinsic vascularity, although the vascular allantois lies against its inner face, contributing to an omphallantoic placenta. In a specialized region at the abembryonic pole, uterine and fetal tissues are separated by a compact mass of shed shell membrane, yolk droplets, and cellular debris. The omphalopleure in this region develops elongate folds that may contribute to sequestration and absorption of this material. Fetal membrane morphogenesis and composition in S. jarrovi are consistent with those of typical squamates. However, this species exhibits unusual placental specializations characteristic of highly placentotrophic lizards. J. Morphol., 2011. © 2011 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

14.
Transmission electron microscopy was used to examine the ultrastructure of the allantoplacenta of garter snakes during the last half of gestation. This placenta occupies the dorsal hemisphere of the egg and is formed through apposition of the chorioallantois to the inner lining of the uterus. The uterine epithelium consists of flattened cells with short, irregular microvilli and others that bear cilia. The lamina propria is vascularized and its capillaries lie at the base of the uterine epithelial cells. The chorionic epithelium consists of a bilayer of squamous cells that are particularly thin superficial to the allantoic capillaries. Neither the chorionic epithelium nor the uterine epithelium undergoes erosion during development. Although a thin remnant of the shell membrane intervenes between fetal and maternal tissue at mid-gestation, it undergoes fragmentation by the end of gestation. Thus, uterine and chorionic epithelial are directly apposed in some regions of the allantoplacenta, forming continuous cellular boundaries at the placental interface. During development, capillaries proliferate in both the uterine and chorioallantoic tissues. By late gestation, the interhemal diffusion distance has thinned in some areas to less than 2 microm through attenuation of the uterine and chorionic epithelia. Morphologically, the allantoplacenta is well adapted for its function in gas exchange. However, the presence of cytoplasmic vesicles, ribosomal ER, and mitochondria in the chorionic and uterine epithelial cells are consistent with the possibility of additional forms of placental exchange.  相似文献   

15.
Mammalian embryos have an intimate relationship with their mothers, particularly with the placental vasculature from which embryos obtain nutrients essential for growth. It is an interesting vascular bed because maternal vessel number and diameter change dramatically during gestation and, in rodents and primates, the terminal blood space becomes lined by placental trophoblast cells rather than endothelial cells. Molecular genetic studies in mice aimed at identifying potential regulators of these processes have been hampered by lack of understanding of the anatomy of the vascular spaces in the placenta and the general nature of maternal-fetal vascular interactions. To address this problem, we examined the anatomy of the mouse placenta by preparing plastic vascular casts and serial histological sections of implantation sites from embryonic day (E) 10.5 to term. We found that each radial artery carrying maternal blood into the uterus branched into 5-10 dilated spiral arteries located within the metrial triangle, populated by uterine natural killer (uNK) cells, and the decidua basalis. The endothelial-lined spiral arteries converged together at the trophoblast giant cell layer and emptied into a few straight, trophoblast-lined "canals" that carried maternal blood to the base of the placenta. Maternal blood then percolated back through the intervillous space of the labyrinth toward the maternal side of the placenta in a direction that is countercurrent to the direction of the fetal capillary blood flow. Trophoblast cells were found invading the uterus in two patterns. Large cells that expressed the trophoblast giant cell-specific gene Plf (encoding Proliferin) invaded during the early postimplantation period in a pattern tightly associated with spiral arteries. These peri/endovascular trophoblast were detected only approximately 150-300 microm upstream of the main giant cell layer. A second type of widespread interstitial invasion in the decidua basalis by glycogen trophoblast cells was detected after E12.5. These cells did not express Plf, but rather expressed the spongiotrophoblast-specific gene Tpbp. Dilation of the spiral arteries was obvious between E10.5 and E14.5 and was associated with a lack of elastic lamina and smooth muscle cells. These features were apparent even in the metrial triangle, a site far away from the invading trophoblast cells. By contrast, the transition from endothelium-lined artery to trophoblast-lined (hemochorial) blood space was associated with trophoblast giant cells. Moreover, the shaping of the maternal blood spaces within the labyrinth was dependent on chorioallantoic morphogenesis and therefore disrupted in Gcm1 mutants. These studies provide important insights into how the fetoplacental unit interacts with the maternal intrauterine vascular system during pregnancy in mice.  相似文献   

16.
Prostaglandin H synthase (PGHS) activity within intrauterine tissues is considered to catalyze a critical step in prostaglandin (PG) biosynthesis at parturition. In sheep, the placenta is a major site of PG production throughout pregnancy, but little information is available concerning the cells that are responsible. Therefore we determined the distribution of immunoreactive (IR-) PGHS in ovine placental tissue obtained at different times of pregnancy using immunohistochemical techniques. In placentomes from early pregnancy (Days 30-54), IR-PGHS was present in maternal epithelial syncytium, but was not detectable in trophoblast cells. Between Day 54 and Day 100, the number of cells that stained positive for PGHS declined in the maternal epithelial layer in the body of the placenta, but IR-PGHS was present in maternal epithelial cells overlying the vascular cones of the placental hemophagous zone. It was also present in the chorionic fibroblasts, but remained undetectable from all classes of trophoblast cells. IR-PGHS was first detectable in the trophoblastic epithelium by Day 114. Between Day 119 and term the trophoblast mononuclear epithelial cells were intensely immunopositive for PGHS, although immunonegative binucleate cells were present. The maternal epithelium was immunonegative except during the last 7-10 days of pregnancy when PGHS immunostaining appeared in both basal and apical regions of the placenta. Thus, the cellular localization of IR-PGHS changes during ovine pregnancy, from predominantly maternal during the first half of gestation to undetectable and then to predominantly trophoblastic between Day 114 and term, suggesting a gestation-dependent change in sites of PG production during ovine pregnancy. Appearance of IR-PGHS in the trophoblast precedes activation of the fetal hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, generally considered to provide the trigger to the onset of parturition in sheep, and would therefore appear to be regulated through alternative pathways or mechanisms.  相似文献   

17.
Examination of late-stage placental material of the lizard Chalcides chalcides from the Hubrecht Laboratorium (Utrecht, The Netherlands) reveals several cytological and histological specializations that appear to have been superimposed over a morphological pattern that is typical for squamates. The chorioallantoic placenta is highly vascularized and consists of a single mesometrial placentome and a generalized paraplacentomal region, both of which are epitheliochorial. The placentome is deciduate, and contains deeply interdigitating folds of hypertrophied uterine and chorioallantoic tissue. Chorionic epithelium lining the placentome comprises enlarged, microvilliated cells, a small proportion of which are diplokaryocytes. The placentomal uterine epithelium is not syncytial and consists of enlarged cells bearing microvilli. The yolk sac placenta is a true omphaloplacenta (sensu stricto), being formed by juxtaposition of uterine tissues to an avascular, bilaminar omphalopleure. Epithelium of the omphalopleure is stratified and is hypertrophied into papillae that project into detritus of the uterine lumen. The omphalopleure is separated from the yolk sac proper by a yolk cleft that is not confluent with the exocoelom and is not invaded by the allantois. Neither an omphalallantoic placenta nor a true choriovitelline placenta is present in late gestation. Morphologically, the mature placentae of C. chalcides are among the most specialized to have been described in reptiles, reflecting the substantial maternal-fetal nutrient transfer that occurs in this species. © 1993 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Uteri taken from 25 bitches at various times during the early stages of pregnancy were studies cytologically to determine how the implantation chamber developed and how fetal-maternal relations were established. On day 13 after the end of estrus, knobs of trophoblastic syncytium formed and became wedged between cells of the uterine luminal epithelium. The syncytium quickly spread along the uterine lumen and into the mouths of the glands, dislodging and surrounding maternal cells. As invasion continued trophoblastic villi, consisting of cores of cytotrophoblast covered by a continuous layer of syncytium, penetrated deeper into the endometrium. The syncytium spread to surround maternal vessels and decidual cells. By day 26 the trophoblast had extended down to the large lacunae. Here syncytial trophoblast covering tips of the villi degenerated, leaving cytotrophoblast exposed to the necrotic zone. These cells possessed characteristics of absorbing cells. Hematomas were formed by focal necrosis of fetal and endometrial tissue at the poles of the implantation sites. Large pools of extravasated blood accumulated and red blood cells were phagocytized by surrounding trophoblastic cells. Therefore, the endotheliochorial relationship in the canine placenta appeared to be established by syncytial trophoblast invading a cellular endometrium. In the necrotic zone and hematomas, cellular trophoblast may have lost its syncytial covering, but elsewhere maternal vessels and decidual cells in the placenta were in direct contact only with syncytial trophoblast.  相似文献   

19.
Synopsis The Atlantic sharpnose shark is a viviparous anamniote that develops an epitheliochorial yolksac placenta. Initially, contents of the yolksac nourish the embryos. Yolk is partially digested in the yolk syncytial-endoderm complex and subsequently transferred to the vitelline circulation. Yolk is also transported by ciliary activity of the yolk stalk ductus to the fetal gut for digestion. When embryos are 4.0cm in length, vascular ridges, termed appendiculae, develop on the yolk stalk. As yolk stores are depleted, the yolksac differentiates into the fetal portion of the placenta and the uterus abutting the yolksac differentiates into the maternal portion of the placenta. The yolk stalk differentiates into an elongate umbilical cord. The uterine epithelium produces secretions that are positive by the periodic acid-Schiff and alcian blue methods and metachromatic when stained with toluidine blue. Uterine capillaries are continuous and the surface epithelium is active both in secretion and transport of nutrients. When the embryos are 7–10cm in length, appendiculae are elongate, branched and populated by separate microvillar and granulated cells. Appendiculae may function as a paraplacental nutrient absorptive organ and be involved in the regulation of osmolarity of periembryonic fluids. The fetal placenta has two functional regions: a proximal portion that is presumed to function as a steroid producing organ and a distal portion that effects nutrient and metabolic exchange between the mother and fetus. Characteristics of the fetal placenta include endocytotic activity, crystalline-like cytoplasmic bodies and fenestrated capillaries. Fetal and maternal components of the placenta are separated by the egg envelope.  相似文献   

20.
Genetic insights into trophoblast differentiation and placental morphogenesis   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
The placenta is comprised of an inner vascular network covered by an outer epithelium, called trophoblast, all designed to promote the delivery of nutrients to the fetus. Several specialized trophoblast cell subtypes arise during development to promote this function, including cells that invade the uterus to promote maternal blood flow to the implantation site, and other cells that fuse into a syncytium, expand and fold to increase the surface area for efficient transport. Mutation of many genes in mice results in embryonic mortality or fetal growth restriction due to defects in placental development. Several important principles about placental development have emerged from these studies. First, distinct molecular pathways regulate the differentiation of the various trophoblast cell subtypes. Second, trophoblast proliferation, differentiation and morphogenesis are highly regulated by interactions with adjacent cell types. Finally, the specific classes of mutant phenotypes observed in the placenta of knockout mice resemble those seen in humans that are associated with preeclampsia and intrauterine growth restriction.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号