Structure of anchoring villi and the trophoblastic shell in the human, baboon and macaque placenta.

Autor: Enders AC; Department of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy, University of California, Davis, CA 95616, USA. acenders@ucdavis.edu, Blankenship TN, Fazleabas AT, Jones CJ
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Placenta [Placenta] 2001 Apr; Vol. 22 (4), pp. 284-303.
DOI: 10.1053/plac.2001.0626
Abstrakt: Anchoring villi of first trimester placentae of the macaque, baboon and human were examined by light and electron microscopy. The anchoring villi of the baboon and macaque are similar in having more elongated cell columns than those of the human and in having more extracellular matrix between cytotrophoblast cells. These species also have a thicker and more uniform trophoblastic shell. The generative region of cytotrophoblast cells adjacent to the villous mesenchyme is similar in all three species, with the aspect of the core abutting this area being lined by a thickened basal lamina. Similarly, migratory cytotrophoblast cells form extracellular matrix in all three species, but matrix-rich regions of the anchoring villi and shell are more extensive in the non-human primates. The extracellular matrix and especially the material resembling fibrillin may serve to strengthen the villi, particularly the elongated villi of the non-human primate, and also may prevent maternal cells migrating into the trophoblastic shell. The baboon and macaque cytotrophoblast cells that form this matrix tend to be linked by gap and desmosomal junctions and are in contiguous arrays, whereas those in the human that are blocked from reaching normal decidua form abundant extracellular matrix but have no gap junctions. Whether the lack of extensive invasion of the endometrium by baboon and macaque cytotrophoblast cells is related to the increased amount of extracellular matrix, their greater distance from the mesenchymal core, or their intercellular linkages is not known. The investigation of isolated villi from the macaque or baboon, as has been extensively carried out in the human, might help to determine whether the cytotrophoblast cells are intrinsically different or are responding to different environmental cues.
(Copyright 2001 Harcourt Publishers Ltd.)
Databáze: MEDLINE