TY - JOUR TI - Hematopoietic stem cell development in the placenta AU - Gekas, Christos AU - Rhodes, KatrinE. AU - Vanhandel, Ben AU - Chhabra, Akanksha AU - Ueno, Masaya AU - Mikkola, HannaK. A. T2 - The International Journal of Developmental Biology AB - The placenta is a highly vascularized organ that mediates fetal-maternal exchange during pregnancy and is thereby vital for the survival and growth of the developing embryo. In addition to having this well-established role in supporting pregnancy, the placenta was recently shown to function as a hematopoietic organ. The placenta is unique among other fetal hematopoietic organs, as it is capable of both generating multipotential hematopoietic cells de novo and establishing a major hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) pool in the conceptus, while protecting HSCs from premature differentiation. The mouse placenta contains two distinct vascular regions that support hematopoiesis: the large vessels in the chorionic plate where HSCs/progenitors are thought to emerge and the labyrinth vasculature where nascent HSCs/progenitors may colonize for expansion and possible functional maturation. Defining how this cytokine- and growth factor rich organ supports HSC generation, maturation and expansion may ultimately help to establish culture protocols for HSC expansion or de novo generation from pluripotent cells. PY - 2010 DO - 10.1387/ijdb.103070cg VL - 54 IS - 6-7 SP - 1089 EP - 1098 J2 - Int. J. Dev. Biol. LA - en SN - 0214-6282 SN - 1696-3547 UR - https://ijdb.ehu.eus/article/103070cg Y2 - 2024/04/30/09:10:05 ER -