Kingdom J, Huppertz B, Seaward G, Kaufmann P
Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Maternal-Fetal Medicine Division, Mount Sinai Hospital, University of Toronto, 600 University Avenue, Ont., M5G 1X5, Toronto, Canada.
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2000 Sep;92(1):35-43. doi: 10.1016/s0301-2115(00)00423-1.
Co-ordinated development of the fetal villous tree of the placenta is necessary for continued fetal growth and well-being. Before fetal viability, blood vessel development within the developing immature intermediate villi (IIV) is characterized by branching angiogenesis, such that the placenta expands to produce 10-16 generations of stem villi. Once fetal viability is attained, a developmental switch occurs to form large numbers of gas-exchanging terminal villi (TV) by non-branching angiogenesis in mature intermediate villi (MIV). Several growth factors, including vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), placenta growth factor (PlGF), angiopoietins, and angiostatins are produced within the villi and act locally, via their receptors, to control angiogenesis. Their relative contributions to placental vascular development are not fully understood at the present time. Severe early-onset intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR) is characterized by absent/reversed end-diastolic flow velocity (ARED) in the umbilical arteries, leading to fetal hypoxia, acidosis and a substantial rise in perinatal mortality and morbidity. The placentas from such cases show a deficit in peripheral villous development, which may be perpetuated by the effects of oxygen (delivered by maternal blood into the intervillous space) upon VEGF-directed angiogenesis, the so-called 'placental hyperoxia' theory of villous maldevelopment. Trophoblast apoptosis is a significant feature of early-onset IUGR and may explain poor flow-independent transfer of nutrients to the fetus. Finally, since transgenic mouse studies highlight the importance of trophoblast-derived transcription factors for placental villous (labyrinth) development, it is possible that the villous trophoblast controls the orderly development of the underlying mesoderm and blood vessels into the fetal villi.
胎盘胎儿绒毛树的协调发育对于胎儿的持续生长和健康至关重要。在胎儿具备存活能力之前,发育中的未成熟中间绒毛(IIV)内的血管发育以分支血管生成特征,胎盘借此扩张产生10 - 16代干绒毛。一旦胎儿具备存活能力,就会发生发育转变,通过成熟中间绒毛(MIV)中的非分支血管生成形成大量进行气体交换的终末绒毛(TV)。包括血管内皮生长因子(VEGF)、胎盘生长因子(PlGF)、血管生成素和血管抑素在内的几种生长因子在绒毛内产生,并通过其受体在局部发挥作用,以控制血管生成。目前尚不完全清楚它们对胎盘血管发育的相对贡献。严重的早发型宫内生长受限(IUGR)的特征是脐动脉舒张末期血流速度缺失/反向(ARED),导致胎儿缺氧、酸中毒以及围产期死亡率和发病率大幅上升。此类病例的胎盘显示外周绒毛发育不足,这可能因氧气(由母体血液输送到绒毛间隙)对VEGF介导的血管生成的影响而持续存在,即绒毛发育不良的“胎盘高氧”理论。滋养层细胞凋亡是早发型IUGR的一个显著特征,可能解释了营养物质向胎儿的非血流依赖性转运不佳的情况。最后,由于转基因小鼠研究强调了滋养层来源的转录因子对胎盘绒毛(迷路)发育的重要性,所以绒毛滋养层有可能控制其下方中胚层和血管向胎儿绒毛的有序发育。