Abstract: | During the period of rapid elongation prior to the initiation of placental attachment (days 12–16 of gestation), the ovine blastocyst consists of a single layer (primarily) of roughly cuboidal trophoblastic cells with an inner lining of flattened endodermal cells. Well-developed spot desmosomes link the adjacent cell borders in both the trophoblastic and endodermal layers. The trophoblastic cells contain acid phosphatase-positive, lysosomelike organelles, the mean diameter of which increases greatly between days 12 and 16 and whose contents vary during development. Also during the developmental period studied, trophoblast cells accumulate lipid; and periodic acid-Schiff-positive binucleate cells appear within the trophoblast layer. A consistent observation throughout the 5 days of rapid growth and differentiation of the blastocyst was the death and disintegration of some trophoblast cells. These disintegrating cells are usually singly dispersed within the trophoblast, although occasionally groups of four or five are observed. The cell death may indicate overall remodelling of the blastocyst, or the cells may represent genetically deficient cells which are unable to respond to the appropriate signal to differentiate. |