Altered placental morphology associated with murine trisomy 16 and murine trisomy 19
- 1 November 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Teratology
- Vol. 40 (5) , 513-523
- https://doi.org/10.1002/tera.1420400514
Abstract
The morphology of placentas from trisomy 16 and trisomy 19 mouse conceptuses aged 12 to 18 gestational days was studied at the light microscopic level. Comparisons were made with placentas from normal littermate animals. Trisomy 16 placentas showed marked changes from normal: 1) the junctional zone showed little indication of normal morphologic differentiation throughout gestation; 2) clusters of germinal trophoblast cells persisted in the labyrinth throughout gestation, whereas these cells disappeared by gestational day 16 in the normal littermate placentas; 3) the labyrinth was reduced in size in the trisomic placentas, and the differentiation of the interhemal membranes was delayed. The size of the labyrinths from trisomy 19 placentas appeared to be decreased, but otherwise the placentas appeared to have normal morphology. These observations and others from the literature show that placental development is affected by the presence of a trisomic genome, and that different trisomies influence the development of the placenta differently. Fortrisomy 16, we propose that the striking changes of the junctional zone may be associated with the trisomy 16-related gene dosage effect for alpha- and beta-interferon cell surface receptors. Because of the homology for this and other genes on mouse chromosome 16 with genes on human chromosome 21, findings related to the altered development of the trisomy 16 mouse may be relevant to understanding some of the phenotypic variations associated with human trisomy 21, the Down syndrome.This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Behavioural and developmental abnormalities in mouse trisomy 19: An animal model of mental retardation induced by chromosome imbalanceTeratology, 1988
- Major Histocompatibility Antigens on Trophoblast and Their Regulation: Implications in the Maternal-Fetal RelationshipAmerican Journal of Reproductive Immunology, 1987
- Genesis and systematization of cardiovascular anomalies and analysis of skeletal malformations in murine trisomy 16 and 19Human Genetics, 1987
- The rat placenta expresses paternal class I major histocompatibility antigensJournal of Reproductive Immunology, 1986
- The Consequences of Chromosome ImbalancePublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1986
- Mouse trisomy 16 as an animal model of human trisomy 21 (Down syndrome): Production of viable trisomy 16 ↔ diploid mouse chimerasDevelopmental Biology, 1984
- Morphologic development of the fetal trisomy 19 mouseTeratology, 1984
- Growth characteristics of the murine trisomy 19 thymusTeratology, 1982
- Increased brain weight/liver weight ratio as a necropsy sign of intrauterine undernutritionJournal of Clinical Pathology, 1972
- Histological and fine structural observations on the placenta of the ratCells Tissues Organs, 1968