Abstract

Conceptus-maternal interactions in the pig were examined at days 10, 13, 16, and 19 of pregnancy. Contact between the chorion and uterine epithelium was not preserved on day 10, but extensive contact occurred in 3 of 5 pregnant gilts on day 13 and was related to localized differentiation of the uterine epithelium. Attachment events occurred earlier and more rapidly than previously reported, commencing in the region of the embryonic disc and progressing toward the extremities of the chorionic vesicle, with stages from apposition through attachment occurring simultaneously along a conceptus at day 13 and thereafter. Apical protuberances on maternal epithelial cells and interposing blunt chorionic processes were evident at sites of early maternal-conceptus interaction, but were reduced at regions exhibiting microvillous interdigitation. Placentation in the pig represents a developmental process consisting of a continuum of sequential events which occur over a broad time frame rather than at specific discrete times.

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