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Varanoid Tooth Eruption and Implantation Modes in a Late Cretaceous Mosasaur

Erupting teeth are some of the oldest witnesses of developmental processes in the vertebrate fossil record and provide an important resource for vertebrate cladistics. Here, we have examined a mosasaur jaw fragment from central Texas using ultrathin ground section histology and 3D tomographic imagin...

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Autores principales: Liu, Min, Reed, David A., Cecchini, Giancarlo M., Lu, Xuanyu, Ganjawalla, Karan, Gonzales, Carol S., Monahan, Richard, Luan, Xianghong, Diekwisch, Thomas G. H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4869606/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27242535
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2016.00145
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author Liu, Min
Reed, David A.
Cecchini, Giancarlo M.
Lu, Xuanyu
Ganjawalla, Karan
Gonzales, Carol S.
Monahan, Richard
Luan, Xianghong
Diekwisch, Thomas G. H.
author_facet Liu, Min
Reed, David A.
Cecchini, Giancarlo M.
Lu, Xuanyu
Ganjawalla, Karan
Gonzales, Carol S.
Monahan, Richard
Luan, Xianghong
Diekwisch, Thomas G. H.
author_sort Liu, Min
collection PubMed
description Erupting teeth are some of the oldest witnesses of developmental processes in the vertebrate fossil record and provide an important resource for vertebrate cladistics. Here, we have examined a mosasaur jaw fragment from central Texas using ultrathin ground section histology and 3D tomographic imaging to assess features critical for the cladistic placement of mosasaurs among varanoids vs. snakes: (i) the orientation of replacement teeth compared to the major tooth axis, (ii) the occurrence of resorption pits, and (iii) the mode of tooth implantation/attachment to the tooth bearing element (TBE). The replacement tooth studied here developed in an inclined position slightly distal of the deciduous parent tooth, similar to another varanoid squamate, the Gila monster Heloderma suspectum. Ground sections and tomographs also demonstrated that the replacement tooth attachment apparatus was entirely intact and that there was no evidence of mechanical deformation. Sections and tomographs further illustrated that the replacement tooth was located within a bony crypt and the inclination of the crypt matched the inclination of the replacement tooth. These preparations also revealed the presence of a resorption pit within the boundaries of the deciduous tooth that surrounded the developing replacement tooth. This finding suggests that developing mosasaur teeth developed within the walls of resorption pits similar to varanoid tooth germs and unlike developing snake teeth which are surrounded by fibrous connective tissue integuments. Finally, mosasaurs featured pseudo-thecodont tooth implantation with teeth anchored within a socket of mineralized tissue by means of a mineralized periodontal ligament. Together, these data indicate that the moderate inclination of the erupting mosasaur tooth studied here is neither a result of postmortem displacement nor a character representative of snakes, but rather a shared character between Mosasaurs and other varanoids such as Heloderma. In conjunction with the presence of resorption pits and the evidence for pseudothecodont tooth implantation, the tooth eruption and implantation characters described in the present study either place mosasaurs among the varanoids or suggest convergent evolution mechanisms between both clades, with mosasaurs evolving somewhat independently from a common varanoid ancestor.
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spelling pubmed-48696062016-05-30 Varanoid Tooth Eruption and Implantation Modes in a Late Cretaceous Mosasaur Liu, Min Reed, David A. Cecchini, Giancarlo M. Lu, Xuanyu Ganjawalla, Karan Gonzales, Carol S. Monahan, Richard Luan, Xianghong Diekwisch, Thomas G. H. Front Physiol Physiology Erupting teeth are some of the oldest witnesses of developmental processes in the vertebrate fossil record and provide an important resource for vertebrate cladistics. Here, we have examined a mosasaur jaw fragment from central Texas using ultrathin ground section histology and 3D tomographic imaging to assess features critical for the cladistic placement of mosasaurs among varanoids vs. snakes: (i) the orientation of replacement teeth compared to the major tooth axis, (ii) the occurrence of resorption pits, and (iii) the mode of tooth implantation/attachment to the tooth bearing element (TBE). The replacement tooth studied here developed in an inclined position slightly distal of the deciduous parent tooth, similar to another varanoid squamate, the Gila monster Heloderma suspectum. Ground sections and tomographs also demonstrated that the replacement tooth attachment apparatus was entirely intact and that there was no evidence of mechanical deformation. Sections and tomographs further illustrated that the replacement tooth was located within a bony crypt and the inclination of the crypt matched the inclination of the replacement tooth. These preparations also revealed the presence of a resorption pit within the boundaries of the deciduous tooth that surrounded the developing replacement tooth. This finding suggests that developing mosasaur teeth developed within the walls of resorption pits similar to varanoid tooth germs and unlike developing snake teeth which are surrounded by fibrous connective tissue integuments. Finally, mosasaurs featured pseudo-thecodont tooth implantation with teeth anchored within a socket of mineralized tissue by means of a mineralized periodontal ligament. Together, these data indicate that the moderate inclination of the erupting mosasaur tooth studied here is neither a result of postmortem displacement nor a character representative of snakes, but rather a shared character between Mosasaurs and other varanoids such as Heloderma. In conjunction with the presence of resorption pits and the evidence for pseudothecodont tooth implantation, the tooth eruption and implantation characters described in the present study either place mosasaurs among the varanoids or suggest convergent evolution mechanisms between both clades, with mosasaurs evolving somewhat independently from a common varanoid ancestor. Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4869606/ /pubmed/27242535 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2016.00145 Text en Copyright © 2016 Liu, Reed, Cecchini, Lu, Ganjawalla, Gonzales, Monahan, Luan and Diekwisch. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Liu, Min
Reed, David A.
Cecchini, Giancarlo M.
Lu, Xuanyu
Ganjawalla, Karan
Gonzales, Carol S.
Monahan, Richard
Luan, Xianghong
Diekwisch, Thomas G. H.
Varanoid Tooth Eruption and Implantation Modes in a Late Cretaceous Mosasaur
title Varanoid Tooth Eruption and Implantation Modes in a Late Cretaceous Mosasaur
title_full Varanoid Tooth Eruption and Implantation Modes in a Late Cretaceous Mosasaur
title_fullStr Varanoid Tooth Eruption and Implantation Modes in a Late Cretaceous Mosasaur
title_full_unstemmed Varanoid Tooth Eruption and Implantation Modes in a Late Cretaceous Mosasaur
title_short Varanoid Tooth Eruption and Implantation Modes in a Late Cretaceous Mosasaur
title_sort varanoid tooth eruption and implantation modes in a late cretaceous mosasaur
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4869606/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27242535
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2016.00145
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