Intrauterine trophoblast migration: A comparative view of humans and rodents.

Abstract:

:Trophoblast migration and invasion through the decidua and maternal uterine spiral arteries are crucial events in placentation. During this process, invasive trophoblast replace vascular endothelial cells as the uterine arteries are remodeled to form more permissive vessels that facilitate adequate blood flow to the growing fetus. Placentation failures resulting from either extensive or shallow trophoblastic invasion can cause pregnancy complications such as preeclampsia, intrauterine growth restriction, placenta creta, gestational trophoblastic disease and even maternal or fetal death. Consequently, the use of experimental animal models such as rats and mice has led to great progress in recent years with regards to the identification of mechanisms and factors that control trophoblast migration kinetics. This review aims to perform a comparative analysis of placentation and the mechanisms and factors that coordinate intrauterine trophoblast migration in humans, rats and mice under physiological and pathological conditions.

journal_name

Cell Adh Migr

authors

Silva JF,Serakides R

doi

10.1080/19336918.2015.1120397

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2016-03-03 00:00:00

pages

88-110

issue

1-2

eissn

1933-6918

issn

1933-6926

journal_volume

10

pub_type

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