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Glycogen-containing cells in the maternal and embryonic portions of the placenta in the rat and the common vole Microtus subarvalis
Authors:T G Zybina
Abstract:Differentiation sequences and further transfiguration of glycogen-rich cells during placenta development were investigated for the rat and field vole Microtus subarvalis (11-20 day gestation). The presence of glycogen is a characteristic feature of decidual cells located in the region of lateral sinusoids, as well as of metrial gland cells, secondary giant trophoblast cells and trophoblast cells in the connective zone of placenta. Glycogen-containing metrial gland cells and trophoblast cells of connective zone of placenta are found to underlie the layer of tertiary giant trophoblast cells that cover the wall of the central arteria. Thus, both maternal and embryo-derived glycogen-containing cells always accompany the tertiary giant trophoblast cells that penetrate deeply into the maternal part of placenta but do not contain glycogen. In the field vole placenta the cells of peripheral trophoblast subpopulation of the connective zone of placenta attaching to the decidua basalis are stained by PAS-reaction more intensely than deeply situated ones. These data, as well as other phenomena revealed here, show that maternal and trophoblastic cells attaching to each other in placenta contain, as a rule glycogen. Glycogen cells in rat placenta and trophoblast cells of peripheral subpopulation of connective zone of placenta are similar in many respects. In this connection, a possible protective role of glycogen-containing cells, that probably favour the co-existence of maternal and embryo-derived cells in placenta, is discussed.
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