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Early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions

In classical theory, teeth of vertebrate dentitions evolved from co-option of external skin denticles into the oral cavity. This hypothesis predicts that ordered tooth arrangement and regulated replacement in the oral dentition were also derived from skin denticles. The fossil batoid ray Schizorhiza...

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Autores principales: Smith, Moya Meredith, Riley, Alex, Fraser, Gareth J., Underwood, Charlie, Welten, Monique, Kriwet, Jürgen, Pfaff, Cathrin, Johanson, Zerina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society 2015
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4614774/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26423843
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.1628
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author Smith, Moya Meredith
Riley, Alex
Fraser, Gareth J.
Underwood, Charlie
Welten, Monique
Kriwet, Jürgen
Pfaff, Cathrin
Johanson, Zerina
author_facet Smith, Moya Meredith
Riley, Alex
Fraser, Gareth J.
Underwood, Charlie
Welten, Monique
Kriwet, Jürgen
Pfaff, Cathrin
Johanson, Zerina
author_sort Smith, Moya Meredith
collection PubMed
description In classical theory, teeth of vertebrate dentitions evolved from co-option of external skin denticles into the oral cavity. This hypothesis predicts that ordered tooth arrangement and regulated replacement in the oral dentition were also derived from skin denticles. The fossil batoid ray Schizorhiza stromeri (Chondrichthyes; Cretaceous) provides a test of this theory. Schizorhiza preserves an extended cartilaginous rostrum with closely spaced, alternating saw-teeth, different from sawfish and sawsharks today. Multiple replacement teeth reveal unique new data from micro-CT scanning, showing how the ‘cone-in-cone’ series of ordered saw-teeth sets arrange themselves developmentally, to become enclosed by the roots of pre-existing saw-teeth. At the rostrum tip, newly developing saw-teeth are present, as mineralized crown tips within a vascular, cartilaginous furrow; these reorient via two 90° rotations then relocate laterally between previously formed roots. Saw-tooth replacement slows mid-rostrum where fewer saw-teeth are regenerated. These exceptional developmental data reveal regulated order for serial self-renewal, maintaining the saw edge with ever-increasing saw-tooth size. This mimics tooth replacement in chondrichthyans, but differs in the crown reorientation and their enclosure directly between roots of predecessor saw-teeth. Schizorhiza saw-tooth development is decoupled from the jaw teeth and their replacement, dependent on a dental lamina. This highly specialized rostral saw, derived from diversification of skin denticles, is distinct from the dentition and demonstrates the potential developmental plasticity of skin denticles.
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spelling pubmed-46147742015-11-02 Early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions Smith, Moya Meredith Riley, Alex Fraser, Gareth J. Underwood, Charlie Welten, Monique Kriwet, Jürgen Pfaff, Cathrin Johanson, Zerina Proc Biol Sci Research Articles In classical theory, teeth of vertebrate dentitions evolved from co-option of external skin denticles into the oral cavity. This hypothesis predicts that ordered tooth arrangement and regulated replacement in the oral dentition were also derived from skin denticles. The fossil batoid ray Schizorhiza stromeri (Chondrichthyes; Cretaceous) provides a test of this theory. Schizorhiza preserves an extended cartilaginous rostrum with closely spaced, alternating saw-teeth, different from sawfish and sawsharks today. Multiple replacement teeth reveal unique new data from micro-CT scanning, showing how the ‘cone-in-cone’ series of ordered saw-teeth sets arrange themselves developmentally, to become enclosed by the roots of pre-existing saw-teeth. At the rostrum tip, newly developing saw-teeth are present, as mineralized crown tips within a vascular, cartilaginous furrow; these reorient via two 90° rotations then relocate laterally between previously formed roots. Saw-tooth replacement slows mid-rostrum where fewer saw-teeth are regenerated. These exceptional developmental data reveal regulated order for serial self-renewal, maintaining the saw edge with ever-increasing saw-tooth size. This mimics tooth replacement in chondrichthyans, but differs in the crown reorientation and their enclosure directly between roots of predecessor saw-teeth. Schizorhiza saw-tooth development is decoupled from the jaw teeth and their replacement, dependent on a dental lamina. This highly specialized rostral saw, derived from diversification of skin denticles, is distinct from the dentition and demonstrates the potential developmental plasticity of skin denticles. The Royal Society 2015-10-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4614774/ /pubmed/26423843 http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.1628 Text en © 2015 The Authors. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Published by the Royal Society under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/, which permits unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Smith, Moya Meredith
Riley, Alex
Fraser, Gareth J.
Underwood, Charlie
Welten, Monique
Kriwet, Jürgen
Pfaff, Cathrin
Johanson, Zerina
Early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions
title Early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions
title_full Early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions
title_fullStr Early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions
title_full_unstemmed Early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions
title_short Early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions
title_sort early development of rostrum saw-teeth in a fossil ray tests classical theories of the evolution of vertebrate dentitions
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4614774/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26423843
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2015.1628
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