Literature DB >> 31622045

The mouse fetal-placental arterial connection: A paradigm involving the primitive streak and visceral endoderm with implications for human development.

Karen M Downs1, Adriana M Rodriguez1.   

Abstract

In Placentalia, the fetus depends upon an organized vascular connection with its mother for survival and development. Yet, this connection was, until recently, obscure. Here, we summarize how two unrelated tissues, the primitive streak, or body axis, and extraembryonic visceral endoderm collaborate to create and organize the fetal-placental arterial connection in the mouse gastrula. The primitive streak reaches into the extraembryonic space, where it marks the site of arterial union and creates a progenitor cell pool. Through contact with the streak, associated visceral endoderm undergoes an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, contributing extraembryonic mesoderm to the placental arterial vasculature, and to the allantois, or pre-umbilical tissue. In addition, visceral endoderm bifurcates into the allantois where, with the primitive streak, it organizes the nascent umbilical artery and promotes allantoic elongation to the chorion, the site of fetal-maternal exchange. Brachyury mediates streak extension and vascular patterning, while Hedgehog is involved in visceral endoderm's conversion to mesoderm. A unique CASPASE-3-positive cell separates streak- and non-streak-associated domains in visceral endoderm. Based on these new insights at the posterior embryonic-extraembryonic interface, we conclude by asking whether so-called primordial germ cells are truly antecedents to the germ line that segregate within the allantois, or whether they are placental progenitor cells. Incorporating these new working hypotheses into mutational analyses in which the placentae are affected will aid understanding a spectrum of disorders, including orphan diseases, which often include abnormalities of the umbilical cord, yolk sac, and hindgut, whose developmental relationship to each other has, until now, been poorly understood. This article is categorized under: Birth Defects > Associated with Preimplantation and Gastrulation Early Embryonic Development > Gastrulation and Neurulation.
© 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Brachyury; Hedgehog; allantoic core domain; allantois; arterial vasculature; caspase-3; embryonic-extraembryonic interface; epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition; fetal-placental connection; gastrula; hypoblast; mesoderm; node; notochord; orphan diseases; placenta; primitive streak; umbilical cord; visceral endoderm; yolk sac

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31622045     DOI: 10.1002/wdev.362

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Wiley Interdiscip Rev Dev Biol        ISSN: 1759-7684            Impact factor:   5.814


  3 in total

1.  Midgut development in rat embryos using microcomputed tomography.

Authors:  Marco Ginzel; Illya Martynov; Rainer Haak; Martin Lacher; Dietrich Kluth
Journal:  Commun Biol       Date:  2021-02-12

2.  Analysis of Placental Arteriovenous Formation Reveals New Insights Into Embryos With Congenital Heart Defects.

Authors:  Jacinta I Kalisch-Smith; Emily C Morris; Mary A A Strevens; Andia N Redpath; Kostantinos Klaourakis; Dorota Szumska; Jennifer E Outhwaite; Xin Sun; Joaquim Miguel Vieira; Nicola Smart; Sarah De Val; Paul R Riley; Duncan B Sparrow
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2022-01-19       Impact factor: 4.599

3.  Topographical relationships of the yolk sac remnant and vitelline vessels with the midgut loop in the extra-embryonic coelom of human embryos.

Authors:  Zhe-Wu Jin; Ji Hyun Kim; Masahito Yamamoto; Gen Murakami; Shin-Ichi Abe; José Francisco Rodríguez-Vázquez
Journal:  Anat Cell Biol       Date:  2022-09-30
  3 in total

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