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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/1340

Title: Interembryonic regions of the uterus of the viviparous lizard Mabuya brachypoda (Squamata : Scincidae)
Authors: Uribe-Aranzabal, MC
Guillette, LJ
Hernández-Franyutti, A
Issue Date: 2006
Abstract: Analysis of the structure and physiology of the uterine incubation chambers of viviparous squamates has provided insight concerning adaptations for gestation. However, the literature addressing the biology of the interembryonic regions of the uterus is very limited, presumably because it has been assumed that this area has little role in the development and support of embryos in viviparous squamates. This study was undertaken to examine the histology of the interembryonic regions of Mabuya brachypoda, a viviparous lizard with microlecithal ova and consequently substantial matrotrophic activity. The incubation chambers are oval, distended zones of the uterus, adjacent to the interembryonic regions. The wall of the interembryonic regions includes: mucosa, formed by a cubodal or columnar epithelium with ciliated and nonciliated cells, and a lamina propria of vascularized connective tissue containing abundant acinar glands
myometrial smooth muscle consisting of inner circular and outer longitudinal layers
and serosa. The segment of the interembryonic region adjacent to the incubation chamber forms a transitional segment that displays folds of the mucosa that protrude into the uterine lumen. The limit of the incubation chamber is well defined by the long mucosal folds of the transitional segment. Long and thin extensions of extraembryonic membranes are present in the lumen of the transitional segment, outside of the incubation chamber region. The presence of abundant uterine glands and extraembryonic membranes in the interembryonic regions during gestation suggests uterine secretory activity and histotrophic transfer of nutrients to embryos in these regions.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11154/1340
ISSN: 0362-2525
Appears in Collections:Ciencias

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