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Glycosylation in the near-term epitheliochorial placenta of the horse, donkey and camel: a comparative study of interbreeding and non-interbreeding species. | LitMetric

Glycosylation in the near-term epitheliochorial placenta of the horse, donkey and camel: a comparative study of interbreeding and non-interbreeding species.

J Reprod Fertil

Academic Unit of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, School of Medicine, University of Manchester, St Mary's Hospital, Whitworth Park, Manchester M13 0JH, UK.

Published: March 2000

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines glycosylation patterns in placental tissues across three species: horse, donkey, and camel, highlighting significant differences between them.
  • The horse and donkey, which can interbreed, show similar glycosylation patterns, whereas the camel shows distinct differences that may prevent interbreeding.
  • The findings suggest that similar glycan expressions in interbreeding species contribute to successful implantation, while glycodiversity may hinder the ability of hybrids to develop placentally.

Article Abstract

Studies from this laboratory have shown great diversity in the glycosylation of tissues comprising the interhaemal barrier of species with different placental types. This diversity may be one of the factors preventing interbreeding between species. Glycan expression within the uterine epithelium and trophoblast of the interhaemal barrier was examined to test this proposition in three species with similar diffuse, microcotyledonary, epitheliochorial allantochorionic types of placenta: the horse (Equus caballus) and donkey (Equus asinus), which can interbreed with each other, and the camel (Camelus dromedarius), which cannot interbreed with either of the other two species. A panel of 14 lectins was used and it was found that glycosylation patterns were generally similar between placental tissues of the horse and donkey, except for the expression of non-bisected complex N-glycan and some sialic acids, whereas those of the camel showed striking differences in the binding of lectins to many structures carrying terminal residues of fucose, N-acetyl galactosamine and beta-galactose, as well as to complex N-glycans and sialic acids. These results are consistent with the proposition that interbreeding species carry similar glycans in tissues forming the interhaemal barrier whereas glycodiversity is one of the factors preventing implantation and subsequent placental development in interspecific hybrids.

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