Search results for "Fetal development"

showing 10 items of 65 documents

Developmental programming of adult haematopoiesis system

2019

The Barker hypothesis of ‘foetal origin of adult diseases’ has led to emphasize the concept of ‘developmental programming’, based on the crucial role of epigenetic factors. Accordingly, it has been demonstrated that parental adversity (before conception and during pregnancy) and foetal factors (i.e., hypoxia, malnutrition and placental insufficiency) permanently modify the physiological systems of the progeny, predisposing them to premature ageing and chronic disease during adulthood. Thus, an altered functionality of the endocrine, immune, nervous and cardiovascular systems is observed in the progeny. However, it remains to be understood whether the haematopoietic system itself also repres…

Epigenomics0301 basic medicineAgingHaematopoietic systemPro-health interventionHematopoietic SystemAgeing-related diseasePsychological interventionPlacental insufficiencyBiochemistryFoetal programmingDevelopmental psychologyFetal Development03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinePregnancymedicineSettore MED/05 - Patologia ClinicaAnimalsHumansEndocrine systemEpigeneticsMolecular BiologyPregnancySettore BIO/11business.industryEpigeneticmedicine.diseaseHaematopoiesisMalnutrition030104 developmental biologyNeurologyFemaleEpigeneticsbusinessDevelopmental programmingAgeing-related disease; Epigenetics; Foetal programming; Haematopoietic system; Pro-health intervention030217 neurology & neurosurgeryBiotechnologyAgeing Research Reviews
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Placental DNA methylation signatures of maternal smoking during pregnancy and potential impacts on fetal growth.

2021

We would like to thank all the families that participated in these studies for their generous contribution. Detailed acknowledgements and funding can be found in Sup plementary Material.

EpigenomicsMaternal smokingPlacentaGeneral Physics and AstronomyReproductive health and childbirthBioinformaticsLow Birth Weight and Health of the NewbornEpigenesis GeneticFetal DevelopmentPregnancyInfant MortalityFetal growth2.1 Biological and endogenous factorsAetiologyPediatricMultidisciplinaryQSmokingCord bloodDNA methylationEpigeneticsFemalemedicine.symptomScience1.1 Normal biological development and functioningInflammationFetus -- Trastorns del creixementBiologyGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyArticleGenetic HeterogeneityGeneticPretermUnderpinning researchTobaccomedicineGeneticsHumansEpigeneticsConditions Affecting the Embryonic and Fetal PeriodsNucleotide MotifsPregnancyHormone activitydNaMGeneral ChemistryEpigenomeDNA MethylationPerinatal Period - Conditions Originating in Perinatal Periodmedicine.diseaseEmbarassades -- Consum de tabacGood Health and Well BeingRisk factorsEpigenesis
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Ultrasonic mensuration of fetal limb bones in the second and third trimesters

1987

Growth of fetal limb bones has been examined in a prospective cross-sectional study in 530 patients between 13 and 42 weeks of gestation by ultrasound. The length of the femur, tibia, humerus, and radius were measured in all cases, and fibula and ulna in 393 cases. For each week of gestation mean lengths (+/- 2 standard deviations) were calculated. All limb bones showed linear growth from 13 weeks to 25 weeks of gestation, after which the growth curve appeared nonlinear. A strong linear relationship (r greater than 0.98) between the BPD and bone length was found for each bone. In five aborted fetuses, prenatal sonographic measurements of the ossified diaphyses were compared with the postnat…

FetusBone DevelopmentAnthropometrybusiness.industryPregnancy Trimester ThirdUltrasoundUlnaAnatomyEmbryonic and Fetal DevelopmentDiaphysismedicine.anatomical_structurePregnancyPregnancy Trimester SecondHumansGestationMedicineFemaleRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingFemurHumerusProspective StudiesTibiabusinessUltrasonographyJournal of Clinical Ultrasound
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Age-Related Reference Ranges for Fetal Foot Length

2000

AIM The aim of this study was to establish age-dependent reference ranges for fetal foot length with gestation as well as for the femur/foot length ratio, based on a mathematical growth model. METHOD In a prospective cross-sectional study of 610 pregnancies with sonographically confirmed gestational age (< 12 weeks' gestation), fetal biometry was performed in addition to measurements of fetal foot length between 12 and 42 completed weeks of gestation. Reference ranges for the fetal foot and for the femur/foot length ratio were constructed with an overall coverage of 90% of the measured data, using a previously established method of determining reference bands for growth parameters. RESULTS …

FetusFootbusiness.industryGestational ageGestational AgeReference rangeGrowth modelAnatomyUltrasonography PrenatalEmbryonic and Fetal DevelopmentCross-Sectional StudiesFetusPregnancyReference ValuesAge relatedHumansGestationMedicineFemaleRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingFemurFemurNuclear medicinebusinessFoot (unit)Ultraschall in der Medizin
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Ontogeny of the human amygdala.

2003

Data on the fetal development of the human amygdala is reviewed with special reference to major ontogenetic events. In the fifth gestational month, the inferior portion of the amygdala reveals cell-dense columns merging with the ganglionic eminence (proliferative zone) in Nissl-stained sections. These columns contain vimentin-positive fibers and can therefore be regarded as migrational routes. In the sixth and seventh months, distinct reorganization of the cytoarchitectonics takes place. The sequential occurrence of afferens can be visualized using anti-GAP-43; moreover, outgrowing axons appear to reach the periphery of the ganglionic eminence. The latter may thus represent an intermediate …

Ganglionic eminenceGeneral NeuroscienceGlutamate receptorGestational AgeNerve Tissue ProteinsAnatomyBiologyAmygdalaCalbindinAmygdalaGeneral Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular BiologyEmbryonic and Fetal Developmentmedicine.anatomical_structurenervous systemHistory and Philosophy of ScienceCytoarchitecturePostsynaptic potentialmedicineHumansCalretininNeuroscienceImmunostainingBiomarkersAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences
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Distribution patterns of vimentin-immunoreactive structures in the human prosencephalon during the second half of gestation.

1999

Neuronal migration is guided by long radially oriented glial fibres. During late stages of development radial glial cells are transformed into astrocytes. A predominant intermediate filament protein within radial glial cells and immature astrocytes is vimentin. In this study fetal brain sections were used to demonstrate the transient features of vimentin-positive radial glia. In the lower half of the cerebral wall of the 6th gestational month bundles, curvature, and crossing of vimentin-positive fibres are regularly seen. Moreover, fibres terminating on vessels are observed. In the upper half fibres are radially oriented; when ascending towards the pial surface the number and diameter of fi…

HistologyExternal capsuleGanglionic eminencePregnancy Trimester ThirdAnterior commissureVimentinAxonal TransportWhite matterEmbryonic and Fetal DevelopmentProsencephalonPregnancymedicineIntermediate Filament ProteinHumansVimentinMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsbiologyDentate gyrusCell BiologyAnatomyImmunohistochemistryProsencephalonmedicine.anatomical_structureAstrocytesPregnancy Trimester Secondbiology.proteinFemaleAnatomyNeurogliaDevelopmental BiologyResearch ArticleJournal of anatomy
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Gene expression of stem cells at different stages of ontological human development.

2013

Abstract Objectives To compare multipotent mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) obtained from chorionic villi (CV), amniotic fluid (AF) and placenta, with regard to their phenotype and gene expression, in order to understand if MSCs derived from different extra-embryonic tissues, at different stages of human ontological development, present distinct stemness characteristics. Study design MSCs obtained from 30 samples of CV, 30 of AF and 10 placentas (obtained from elective caesarean sections) were compared. MSCs at second confluence cultures were characterized by immunophenotypic analysis with flow cytometry using FACS CANTO II. The expression of the genes Oct-4 (Octamer-binding transcription fact…

Homeobox protein NANOGAdultPAX6 Transcription FactorKruppel-Like Transcription FactorsBiologyFetal DevelopmentYoung AdultMesenchymal stem cells; Extra-embryonic tissues; Gene expressionPregnancyGene expressionHumansPaired Box Transcription FactorsCD90Eye ProteinsMesenchymal stem cellHomeodomain ProteinsExtra-embryonic tissueSOXB1 Transcription FactorsMesenchymal stem cellObstetrics and GynecologyGene Expression Regulation DevelopmentalMesenchymal Stem CellsNanog Homeobox ProteinMiddle AgedAmniotic FluidMolecular biologyRepressor ProteinsHaematopoiesisSettore MED/18 - Chirurgia GeneraleReal-time polymerase chain reactionReproductive Medicineembryonic structuresFemaleRNA extractionGene expressionStem cellChorionic VilliOctamer Transcription Factor-3European journal of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive biology
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Effects of maternal ageing and dietary antioxidant supplementation on ovulation, fertilisation and embryo development in vitro in the mouse.

1999

The present study aims to ascertain whether dietary supplementation with a mixture of vitamins C and E may prevent the maternal-age-associated decrease in both the number of ovulated oocytes after exogenous ovarian stimulation and embryo development in vitro in the mouse. Experimental females were fed a standard diet supplemented with i) high doses of vitamins C and E from the first day of weaning until 12 or 40 weeks of age; or ii) moderate doses of vitamins C and E from the first day of weaning until 12 weeks of age or from 22 to 33 weeks of age. The age-related reduction in ovulation rate was partially prevented by supplementing diet with high doses of vitamins C and E from the first day…

InfertilityVitaminMaleOvulationmedicine.medical_specialtyAgingmedia_common.quotation_subjectAscorbic AcidFertilization in VitroWeaningBiologyAntioxidantsAndrologychemistry.chemical_compoundEmbryonic and Fetal DevelopmentMiceInternal medicinemedicineWeaningAnimalsHumansVitamin EBlastocystOvulationFertilisationmedia_commonmedicine.diseaseAscorbic acidDietMice Inbred C57BLEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurechemistryAgeingDietary SupplementsMice Inbred CBAFemaleMaternal AgeReproduction, nutrition, development
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Loss of desmoglein 2 suggests essential functions for early embryonic development and proliferation of embryonal stem cells.

2002

Summary Desmoglein 2 (Dsg2) is a Ca 2+ -dependent adhesion molecule of desmosomes and is synthesized in all desmosome-bearing tissues from their earliest appearance onward. To examine the function of Dsg2, its gene was inactivated by homologous recombination in embryonal stem (ES) cells for the generation of knockout mice. DSG2 −/− mice and a considerable number of DSG2 +/− mice died at or shortly after implantation. On the other hand, DSG2 −/− blastocysts developed an apparently normal trophectoderm layer, the first tissue known to produce desmosomes, and hatched properly. Immunofluorescence analyses of these blastocysts showed, however, that the distribution of the desmosomal plaque prote…

MaleHistologyPopulationImmunoblottingFluorescent Antibody TechniqueBiologyPathology and Forensic MedicineAdherens junctionEmbryonic and Fetal DevelopmentMiceDesmosomemedicineInner cell massAnimalseducationbeta CateninMice Knockouteducation.field_of_studyDesmoglein 2CadherinCell growthStem CellsGap JunctionsCell BiologyGeneral MedicineCadherinsEmbryo MammalianEmbryonic stem cellCell biologyCytoskeletal ProteinsMicroscopy Electronmedicine.anatomical_structureBlastocystDesmoplakinsImmunologyTrans-ActivatorsFemaleStem cellDesmogleinsEuropean journal of cell biology
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Bone morphogenetic protein-4 is required for mesoderm formation and patterning in the mouse.

1995

Bone morphogenetic protein-4 (BMP-4) is a member of the TGF-beta superfamily of polypeptide signaling molecules, closely related to BMP-2 and to Drosophila decapentaplegic (DPP). To elucidate the role of BMP-4 in mouse development the gene has been inactivated by homologous recombination in ES cells. Homozygous mutant Bmp-4tm1blh embryos die between 6.5 and 9.5 days p.c., with a variable phenotype. Most Bmp-4tm1blh embryos do not proceed beyond the egg cylinder stage, do not express the mesodermal marker T(Brachyury), and show little or no mesodermal differentiation. Some homozygous mutants develop to the head fold or beating heart/early somite stage or beyond. However, they are development…

MaleMesodermBrachyuryHeterozygoteanimal structuresMolecular Sequence DataBiologyCell LineMesodermEmbryonic and Fetal DevelopmentMiceGeneticsmedicineParaxial mesodermAnimalsCrosses GeneticDecapentaplegicBase SequenceChimeraStem CellsHomozygoteProteinsGastrulaCell biologyMice Inbred C57BLmedicine.anatomical_structureBone morphogenetic protein 5PhenotypeBone morphogenetic protein 4GDF6embryonic structuresMesoderm formationBone Morphogenetic ProteinsGene TargetingFemaleDevelopmental BiologyGenesdevelopment
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