JOURNAL ARTICLE

Vivir ... en una residencia de personas mayores

Beatriz Gutiérrez Cabezas

Year: 2009 Journal:   En la calle: revista sobre situaciones de riesgo social Vol: 15 (12)Pages: 22-23

Abstract

The human placenta is essential for successful reproduction. There is great variation in the anatomy and development of the placenta in different species, meaning that animal models provide limited information about human placental development and function. Until recently, it has been impossible to isolate trophoblast cells from the human placenta that proliferate in vitro. This has limited our ability to understand pregnancy disorders. Generating an in vitro model that recapitulates the unique features of the human placenta has been challenging. The first in vitro model system of human trophoblast that could be cultured long term and differentiated to syncytiotrophoblast (SCT) and extravillous trophoblast (EVT) was a two-dimensional (2D) culture system of human trophoblast stem cells. Here, we describe a protocol to isolate trophoblast from first-trimester human placentas that can be grown long term in a three-dimensional (3D) organoid culture system. Trophoblast organoids can be established within 2-3 weeks, passaged every 7-10 d, and cultured for over a year. The structural organization of these human trophoblast organoids closely resembles the villous placenta with a layer of cytotrophoblast (VCT) that differentiates into superimposed SCT. Altering the composition of the medium leads to differentiation of the trophoblast organoids into HLA-G+ EVT cells which rapidly migrate and invade through the Matrigel droplet in which they are cultured. Our previous research confirmed that there is similarity between the trophoblast organoids and in vivo placentas in their transcriptomes and ability to produce placental hormones. This organoid culture system provides an experimental model to investigate human placental development and function as well as interactions of trophoblast cells with the local and systemic maternal environment.

Keywords:
Computer science

Metrics

0
Cited By
0.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
26
Refs
0.01
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Topics

Aging, Health, and Disability
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Social Sciences and Policies
Social Sciences →  Social Sciences →  General Social Sciences
© 2026 ScienceGate Book Chapters — All rights reserved.