Human placentation involves the invasion of the conceptus into the wall of the uterus, and establishment of a blood supply from the maternal spiral arteries. The placenta has therefore been likened to a malignant tumour, albeit a highly regulated one. Oxygen plays an important role in controlling both placental development and tumour behaviour. In the placenta, early development takes place in a physiological low oxygen environment, which undergoes a transition with onset of the full maternal arterial circulation towards the end of the first trimester. By comparison, in tumours there is often a progressive hypoxia as the mass outgrows its blood supply. Both early placental tissues and tumour cells show high rates of proliferation, and the e...
The placenta is an active organ between mother and fetus. Therefore it is essential to maintain the ...
Chronic hypoxia is a common complication of pregnancy, arising through malperfusion of the placenta ...
The placenta adapts its transport capacity to nutritional cues developmentally, although relatively ...
Development of the human placenta takes place in contrasting oxygen concentrations at different stag...
Oxygen tension is thought to regulate many of the cellular and molecular processes that contribute t...
In this review we note that the placenta and cancer both develop in microenvironments in which there...
Ex situ culture of human gestational tissues has been routinely used as a model to investigate tissu...
The placenta is crucial for life. It is an ephemeral but complex organ acting as the barrier interfa...
Development of the early embryo takes place under low oxygen tension. Under such conditions, the emb...
The most important function of the placenta is the exchange of nutrients and oxygen between a mother...
Placenta in certain species including the human has evolved as a highly invasive tumor-like organ in...
The placenta is the exchange organ that regulates metabolic processes between the mother and her dev...
Timely regulated changes in oxygen partial pressure are important for placental formation. Disturban...
OBJECTIVE: The effects of varying oxygen tensions on tissue metabolic behavior are not well understo...
Oxygen levels in the placental microenvironment throughout gestation are not constant, with severe h...
The placenta is an active organ between mother and fetus. Therefore it is essential to maintain the ...
Chronic hypoxia is a common complication of pregnancy, arising through malperfusion of the placenta ...
The placenta adapts its transport capacity to nutritional cues developmentally, although relatively ...
Development of the human placenta takes place in contrasting oxygen concentrations at different stag...
Oxygen tension is thought to regulate many of the cellular and molecular processes that contribute t...
In this review we note that the placenta and cancer both develop in microenvironments in which there...
Ex situ culture of human gestational tissues has been routinely used as a model to investigate tissu...
The placenta is crucial for life. It is an ephemeral but complex organ acting as the barrier interfa...
Development of the early embryo takes place under low oxygen tension. Under such conditions, the emb...
The most important function of the placenta is the exchange of nutrients and oxygen between a mother...
Placenta in certain species including the human has evolved as a highly invasive tumor-like organ in...
The placenta is the exchange organ that regulates metabolic processes between the mother and her dev...
Timely regulated changes in oxygen partial pressure are important for placental formation. Disturban...
OBJECTIVE: The effects of varying oxygen tensions on tissue metabolic behavior are not well understo...
Oxygen levels in the placental microenvironment throughout gestation are not constant, with severe h...
The placenta is an active organ between mother and fetus. Therefore it is essential to maintain the ...
Chronic hypoxia is a common complication of pregnancy, arising through malperfusion of the placenta ...
The placenta adapts its transport capacity to nutritional cues developmentally, although relatively ...