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The Placenta and Fetal Membranes

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multinuclear giant cells. uninuclear cells. Morphologically. Syncytiotrophoblast. Cytotrophoblast ... chromosome have been identified in women for up to 5 years ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Placenta and Fetal Membranes


1
The Placenta and Fetal Membranes
  • ????? ????
  • R1. ???

2
Fetal Tissues of the Fetal-Maternal Communication
System
  • The extravillous and villous traphoblasts
  • Placental arm
  • The fetal membranes (the amnion-chorion leave)
  • Paracrine arm
  • Human placenta hemochorioendothelial type

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4
Early Human Development
  • Zygote
  • Blastomeres
  • Morula
  • Blastocyst
  • Embryo
  • Fetus
  • Conceptus

5
Fertilization of the Ovum and Cleavage of the
Zygote
  • Moore, fig3-5

6
  • 58-cell blastocyst
  • 107-cell blastocyst
  • Fig 5-1

7
  • Implantation
  • Moore, fig 3-4

8
  • Biology of trophoblast
  • Trophoblast is the most variable in structure,
    function and development
  • invasiveness provides for attatchment of
    blastocyst to decidua of uterine cavity
  • nutrition of the conceptus
  • function as endocrine organ in human pregnancy
  • essential to maternal physiological adaptations
    maintenance of pregnancy

9
  • Differentiation
  • Cellular, syncytial/ uninuclear , multinuclear
  • Formation of the Syncytium

10
  • Cytotrophoblasts are the cellular progenitors of
    the syncytiotrophoblast

11
  • after apposition adherence, intrusion of
    cytotrophoblast between endometrial epithelial
    cells
  • this process is facilitated by degradation of the
    extracellula matrix of endometrium /decidua
    catalyzed by
  • urokinase-type plasminogen activator
  • urokinase plasminogen activator receptor
  • multiple metalloproteinase
  • These functions of cytotrophoblasts invading the
    endometrium are indistinguishable from those of
    metastasizing malignant cells

12
Immunological Acceptance of the Conceptus
  • Previous Theories
  • antigenic immaturity of the embryo-fetus
  • diminished immunological responsiveness of the
    pregnant woman
  • Decidua immunologically privileged tissue site
  • The acceptance and the survival of conceptus in
    the maternal uterus must be attributed to
    immunological peculiarity of the trophoblasts,
    not the decidua

13
Current Status of Research
  • Expression of the HLA system in trophoblast
    unique set of lymphocytes
  • gt may provide explanation for immunological
    acceptance of the conceptus
  • ?? trophoblast HLA expression (monomorphic HLA-G
    class I)? uterine large granular lymphocyte
    (LGL)? ???? ??. ??? ??? ???? ??.

14
Immunocompetency of the Trophoblasts
  • Many researchers focused on the expression of the
    major histocompatibility complex (MHC) antigens
    in trophoblast
  • MHC class II antigens are absent from
    trophoblasts at all stages of gestation

15
Trophoblast HLA Class I Expression
  • Normal implantation is dependent upon controlled
    trophoblast invasion of maternal
    endometrium/decidua and the spiral arteries
  • a mechanism for permitting and then for limitting
    trophoblast invasion
  • Such a system involves the uterine large granular
    lymphocytes(LGSs) and the unique expression of
    specific nomomeric HLA class I antigens in the
    trophoblasts

16
HLA-I Gene Expression
  • HLA genes
  • the products of multiple genetic loci of the MHC
    within short arm of chromosome 6
  • 17 class I genes have been identified
  • three classical genes
  •  A, B, C  gt major class I(a) transplantation
    antigens
  • three other class I(b) genes
  • E, F, G  gt class I HLA antigen
  • HLA-G gene

17
Uterine Large Granular Lymphocyte (LGL)
  • Believed to be lymphoid and of bone marrow origin
    and natural killer cell lineage.
  • Present in large numbers only at the midluteal
    phase of the cycle-at the expected time of
    implantation in the human endometrium.
  • Near the end of luteal phase of nonfertile
    ovulatory cycles, the nuclei of LGLs begin to
    disintegrate.
  • With blastocyst implantation, these cells persist
    in the decidua during the early weeks of
    pregnancy.
  • speculated that LGLs are involved in the
    regulation of trophoblast invasion.

18
HLA-G Expression in Human Trophoblasts
  • HLA-G antigen
  • identified only in extravillous cytotrophoblast
    in decidua basails and chorion laeve
  • not present in villous trophoblast, either in
    syncytium or in cytotrophoblasts.
  • expressed in cytotrophoblast that are contiguous
    with maternal tissue (decidual cell)
  • It is hopothesized that HLA-G is immunologically
    permissive of antigen mismatch between mother and
    fetus.

19
HLA Expression in the Human Embryo
  • as gestation progresses, cells from inner cell
    mass of blastocyst gradually develop both class I
    and II HLA antigen
  • these tissuee are not in direct contact with
    maternal tissue or blood

20
Implantation and Integrin Switching
  • Apposition, adherence, then intrusion and
    invasion of the endometrium/decidua by
    cytotrophoblast(implantation) appears to be
    dependent upon
  • trophoblast elaboration of specific proteinases
  • degrade selected extracellular matrix proteins of
    the endometrium/decidua
  • coordinated and alternating process referred to
    as "integrin switching
  • facilitates migration and then attachment of
    trophoblasts in the decidua

21
  • Integrin
  • one of four families of cell adhesion molecules
    (CAMs)
  • cell-surface receptors that mediate the adhesion
    of cells to extracellular matrix proteins

22
Trophoblast Attachment in Decidua Oncofetal
Fibronectin
  • onfFN(oncofetal fibronectin)
  • unique glycopeptide of the trophouteronectin
    molecule
  • trophouteronectin or trophoblast glue
  • formed by extravillous trophoblast, including
    those of chorion laeve
  • Function
  • a critical role for migration and attachment of
    the trophoblasts to maternal decidua
  • facilitates separation of extraembryonic tissues
    from the uterus at delivery

23
Embryonic and Placental Development
  • Early Blastocyst
  • Trophoblast
  • hCG
  • Grow expand

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Embryonic Development after Implantation
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Cytotrophoblast Invasion of Decidual Vessels
  • Capillary network
  • arterioles
  • Spiral arteries

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  • Several curious features
  • trophoblasts in the vessels lumen do not appear
    to replicate
  • these cells are not readily dislodged by flow of
    blood
  • these cytotrophoblast appear to migrate against
    arterial flow and pressure
  • no obvious adhesion of these cells one to the
    other
  • invasion of maternal vascular tissue bt
    trophoblasts involves only the decidual spiral
    arteries, not the veins

31
Organization of Placenta
32
  • Trophoblast Ultrastructure
  • Prominent microvilli of the syncytial surface
    (brush border)
  • pinocytotic vacuoles and vesicles
  • absorptive and secretory placental function

33
  • Chorionic Villi
  • 12th day? ?? ??
  • Primary villi
  • proliferation of cytotrophoblast extend into
    syncytiotrophoblast
  • Secondary villi
  • mesenchymal cord, derived from cytotrophoblast,
    invade solid trophoblast column
  • Tertiary villi
  • after angiogenesis occurs from the mesenchymal
    cores in situ
  • 17th day? fetal blood vessels are functional
    placental circulation? establish?.

34
  • Characteristic of development of H-mole
  • some villi, in which absence of angiogenesis
    results in a lack of circulation, may distended
    with fluid and form vesicles

35
  • Placental Cotyledons
  • Certain villi of the chorion frondosum extend
    from chorionic plate to the decidua and serve as
    anchoring villi
  • Each of the main stem villi(truncal) and their
    ramifications (rami) constitute a placental
    cotyledon (lobe)
  • For each cotyledon, a 111 ratio of artery to
    vein to cotyledon

36
  • Breaks in the Placental " Barrier
  • Numerous findings of passage of cells between
    mother and fetus in both directions
  • ex) erythroblastosis fetalis
  • A few fetal blood cells are found in the mother's
    blood
  • Fetal leukocytes may replicate in the mother and
    leukocyte s bearing a Y chromosome have been
    identified in women for up to 5 years after
    giving birth to a son

37
  • Placetal Size and Weight
  • Total number of cotyledons remains the same
    throughout gestation
  • Individual cotyledones continue to grow
  • Placental weights vary considerably

38
  • Placental Aging
  • As villi continue to branch and terminal
    ramifications become more numerous and smaller
  • gt volume and prominence of cytotrophoblasts
    decrease
  • As syncytium thins and forms knots
  • gt vessels become more prominent and lie closer to
    the surface
  • The stroma of the villi
  • in early pregnancy
  • branching connective ts. cells are seperated by
    abundant loose intercellular matrix
  • later
  • stroma becomes denser, and the cells more spindly
    and more closely packed

39
  • Histologic changes that accompany placental
    growth and aging are suggestive of increase in
    the efficiency of transport to and exchange to
    meet increasing fetal metabolic requirements
  • decrease in thickness of the syncytium
  • partial reduction of cytotropholastic cell
  • decrease in the stroma
  • increase in the number of capillaries and
    approximation of these vessels to the syncytial
    surface
  • By 4 months
  • the apparent continuity of the cytotrophoblast is
    broken
  • the syncytium forms knots on the more numerous,
    smaller villi

40
  • At term
  • Covering of villi may be focally reduced to a
    thin layer of syncytium with minimal connective
    tissue
  • Fetal capillaries seem to abut the tropohoblast
  • Villous stroma, Hofbauer cells, and
    cytotrophoblasts are markedly reduced
  • villi appear filled with thin-walled capillaries
  • Other changes suggestive of a decrease in the
    efficiency for placental exchange
  • thickening of the basement membrane of
    trophoblast capillaries
  • obliteration of certain fetal vessels
  • fibrin deposition on the surface of villi in
    basal and chorionic plates as well as elsewhere
    in the intervillous space

41
Blood Circulation in the Mature Placenta
  • A section through the placenta in situ
  • amnion  ?  chorion?  chorionic villi  ?  
    intervillous space ?   decidual plate  ?  
    myometrium

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Fetal Circulation
  • 2 umbilical arteries
  • deoxygenated, or "venous-like" blood flows to the
    placenta
  • 1 umbilical vein
  • with a significantly higher oxygen content
  • Hyrtl anastomosis
  • Two umbilical a. separate at the chorionic plate
    to supply branches to the cotyledons

44
Maternal Circulation
  • Intervillous space -gt chorionic plate -gt vein
  • Spiral a. ? ????, vein? ???? ??
  • Ut. Contraction?? vein??
  • Intervillous space?? ???? ??? ???? ????
  • Ramsey's concept

45
  • The principle factors regulating the flow of
    blood in the intervillous space
  • arterial blood pressure
  • intrauterine pressure
  • pattern of uterine contraction
  • factors that act specifically upon the arteriolar
    walls

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The Amnion
  • Innermost fetal membrane and is contiguous with
    amnionic fluid
  • Avascular structure
  • Provide almost all of the tensile strength of the
    fetal membranes
  • protect against rupture or tearing

48
Structure
  • single layer of cuboidal epithelial cells
  • basement membrane
  • acellular compact layer
  • fibroblast-like mesenchymal cells
  • zona spongiosa
  • Missing element of human amnion
  • smooth muscle cell, nerves, lymphatics, blood
    vessels

49
Development
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Amnion Cell Histogenesis
  • Amnion epithelial cells
  • derived from fetal ectoderm (embryonic disc)
  • active metabolically synthesis of tissue
    inhibitos of metalloproteinase-1
  • Amnion mesenchymal cells
  • derived from the embryonic mesoderm
  • synthesis of interstitial collagens that make up
    the compact layer of the amnion
  • highly capable of synthesizing cytokines - IL-6,
    IL-8, MCP-1
  • increased in response to bacterial toxin and IL-1

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53
Anatomy
  • Reflected amnion
  • Placental amnion
  • Umbilical amnion

54
Tensile Strength
  • decidua and chorion laeve are quite elastic and
    can expand to twice normal size during pregnancy
  • Amnion provides the major strength of the
    membrane
  • Tensile strength of amnion resides almost
    exclusively in the compact layer
  • composed of cross-linked interstial collagens I,
    III, and lesser amounts of V and VI

55
Metabolic Functions
  • solute and water  transport to maintain amnionic
    fluid homeostasis
  • produces a variety of bioactive compounds
  • vasoactive peptides, growth factors, cytokines
  • Amnionic Fluid
  • normally clear fluid that collects within the
    amnionic cavity increases in quantity as
    pregnancy advances until near term, when it
    normally decreases
  • Average volume of about 1,000 mL is found at term

56
Umbilical Cord and related Structures
  • Development

57
Structure and Function
  • Umbilical cord, or funis
  • fetal umbilicus -fetal surface of the placenta
  • diameter 0.8 - 2.0 cm
  • average length 55 cm (usual length 30 - 100 cm)
  • nodulation , false knot
  • Extracellular matrix Wharton's jelly

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