Environmental constraints and pathologies that modulate equine placental genes and development

Equine placental development is a long process with unique features. Implantation occurs around 40 days of gestation (dpo) with the presence of a transient invasive placenta from 25–35 to 100–120 dpo. The definitive, non-invasive placenta remains until term (330 days). This definitive placenta is di...

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Veröffentlicht in:Reproduction (Cambridge, England) England), 2022-03, Vol.163 (3), p.R25-R38
Hauptverfasser: Robles, Morgane, Loux, Shavahn, de Mestre, Amanda M, Chavatte-Palmer, Pascale
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container_issue 3
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container_title Reproduction (Cambridge, England)
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creator Robles, Morgane
Loux, Shavahn
de Mestre, Amanda M
Chavatte-Palmer, Pascale
description Equine placental development is a long process with unique features. Implantation occurs around 40 days of gestation (dpo) with the presence of a transient invasive placenta from 25–35 to 100–120 dpo. The definitive, non-invasive placenta remains until term (330 days). This definitive placenta is diffuse and epitheliochorial, exchanging nutrients, gas and waste with the endometrium through microvilli, called microcotyledons. These are lined by an external layer of haemotrophic trophoblast. Moreover, histotrophic exchange remains active through the histotrophic trophoblast located along the areolae. Placental development is dependent on the maternal environment that can be affected by several factors (e.g. nutrition, metabolism, age, embryo technologies, pathologies) that may affect fetal development as well as long-term offspring health. The first section of the review focuses on normal placental development as well as definitive placental structure. Differences between the various regions of the placenta are also highlighted. The latter sections provide an overview of the effects of the maternal environment and reproductive pathologies, respectively, on trophoblast/placental gene expression and structure. So far, only pre-implantation and late gestation/term data are available, which demonstrate important placental plasticity in response to environmental variation, with genes involved in oxidative stress and tissue differentiation mostly involved in the pre-implantation period, whereas genes involved in feto-placental growth and nutrient transfers are mostly perturbed at term.
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subjects Animal biology
Animals
Embryo Implantation
Female
Fetal Development
Horses
Life Sciences
Placenta - metabolism
Placentation - physiology
Pregnancy
Reproductive Biology
Review
Sexual reproduction
Trophoblasts
Veterinary medicine and animal Health
title Environmental constraints and pathologies that modulate equine placental genes and development
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