Artigo Revisado por pares

Branchial placenta in the viviparous teleost Ilyodon whitei (Goodeidae)

2014; Wiley; Volume: 275; Issue: 12 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1002/jmor.20315

ISSN

1097-4687

Autores

Mari Carmen Uribe, Gabino De la Rosa‐Cruz, Adriana García‐Alarcón,

Tópico(s)

Pregnancy and preeclampsia studies

Resumo

ABSTRACT Intraluminal gestation, as it occurs in viviparous goodeids, allows a wide diversity of embryo‐maternal metabolic exchanges. The branchial placenta occurs in embryos developing in intraluminal gestation when ovarian folds enter through the operculum, into the branchial chamber. The maternal ovarian folds may extend to the embryonic pharyngeal cavity. A branchial placenta has been observed in few viviparous teleosts, and there are not previous histological analyses. This study analysis the histological structure in the goodeid Ilyodon whitei . The moterno ovarian folds extend through the embryonic operculum and reach near the gills, occupying part of the branchial chamber. These folds extend also into the pharyngeal cavity. In some regions, the epithelia of the ovarian folds and embryo were in apposition, developing a placental structure in which, maternal and embryonic capillaries lie in close proximity. The maternal epithelium has desquamated cells which may enter through the branchial chamber to the pharyngeal cavity and the alimentary tract. The complex processes that occur in the ovaries of viviparous teleosts, and its diverse adaptations for viviparity, as the presence of branchial placenta, are relevant in the study of the evolution of vertebrate viviparity. J. Morphol. 275:1406–1417, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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