Fbp. Wooding et al., STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION IN THE RUMINANT SYNEPITHELIOCHORIAL PLACENTA -CENTRAL ROLE OF THE TROPHOBLAST BINUCLEATE CELL IN DEER, Microscopy research and technique, 38(1-2), 1997, pp. 88-99
The ruminant placenta has a very uniform gross structure based on loca
lised areas of fetomaternal membrane apposition and proliferation to f
orm placentomes. There is no consistency, however, in the number or si
ze of these placentomes (6-150), nor in the villus architecture of the
individual placentome. The one consistent feature is the binucleate c
ell (BNC) population in the trophoblast. These BNC form 15-20% of the
epithelium in all ruminants examined so far. They synthesise the place
ntal lactogen hormone and other glycoproteins and migrate through tigh
t junctions to fuse with a uterine epithelial cell to form initially f
etomaternal hybrid trinucleate cells (TNC) and subsequently syncytial
plaques (SP). Such SP may be transient or persist throughout pregnancy
depending on the species. The wide range of deer species examined con
firms the uniformity of the BNC hormone production, migration, and fus
ion pattern described for other ruminants. BNC migration produces pred
ominantly transient TNC, but there are areas of SP largely restricted
to the apex of the maternal crypts. Maternal large granule lymphocytes
(LGL) are uniquely found in deer placentomal uterine epithelium; they
are usually closely associated with TNC and SP sites, but the signifi
cance of the interactions remains to be established. (C) 1997 Wiley-Li
ss, Inc.