Scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral 'teeth'.

The debate about the origin of the vertebrate dentition has been given fresh fuel by new fossil discoveries and developmental studies of extant animals. Odontodes (teeth or tooth-like structures) can be found in two distinct regions, the 'internal' oropharyngeal cavity and the 'extern...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Qingming Qu, Sophie Sanchez, Henning Blom, Paul Tafforeau, Per Erik Ahlberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3741376?pdf=render
_version_ 1818961738043752448
author Qingming Qu
Sophie Sanchez
Henning Blom
Paul Tafforeau
Per Erik Ahlberg
author_facet Qingming Qu
Sophie Sanchez
Henning Blom
Paul Tafforeau
Per Erik Ahlberg
author_sort Qingming Qu
collection DOAJ
description The debate about the origin of the vertebrate dentition has been given fresh fuel by new fossil discoveries and developmental studies of extant animals. Odontodes (teeth or tooth-like structures) can be found in two distinct regions, the 'internal' oropharyngeal cavity and the 'external' skin. A recent hypothesis argues that regularly patterned odontodes is a specific oropharyngeal feature, whereas odontodes in the external skeleton lack this organization. However, this argument relies on the skeletal system of modern chondrichthyans (sharks and their relatives), which differ from other gnathostome (jawed vertebrate) groups in not having dermal bones associated with the odontodes. Their external skeleton is also composed of monoodontode 'placoid scales', whereas the scales of most early fossil gnathostomes are polyodontode, i.e. constructed from several odontodes on a shared bony base. Propagation phase contrast X-ray Synchrotron microtomography (PPC-SRµCT) is used to study the polyodontode scales of the early bony fish Andreolepis hedei. The odontodes constructing a single scale are reconstructed in 3D, and a linear and regular growth mechanism similar to that in a gnathostome dentition is confirmed, together with a second, gap-filling growth mechanism. Acanthodian tooth whorls are described, which show that ossification of the whorl base preceded and probably patterned the development of the dental lamina, in contrast to the condition in sharks where the dental lamina develops early and patterns the dentition.The new findings reveal, for the first time, how polyodontode scales grow in 3D in an extinct bony fish. They show that dentition-like odontode patterning occurs on scales and that the primary patterning unit of a tooth whorl may be the bony base rather than the odontodes it carries. These results contradict the hypothesis that oropharyngeal and external odontode skeletons are fundamentally separate and suggest that the importance of dermal bone interactions to odontode patterning has been underestimated.
first_indexed 2024-12-20T12:18:12Z
format Article
id doaj.art-5b27a61104cd40a6a6a9effa697004c4
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1932-6203
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-20T12:18:12Z
publishDate 2013-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj.art-5b27a61104cd40a6a6a9effa697004c42022-12-21T19:41:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0188e7189010.1371/journal.pone.0071890Scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral 'teeth'.Qingming QuSophie SanchezHenning BlomPaul TafforeauPer Erik AhlbergThe debate about the origin of the vertebrate dentition has been given fresh fuel by new fossil discoveries and developmental studies of extant animals. Odontodes (teeth or tooth-like structures) can be found in two distinct regions, the 'internal' oropharyngeal cavity and the 'external' skin. A recent hypothesis argues that regularly patterned odontodes is a specific oropharyngeal feature, whereas odontodes in the external skeleton lack this organization. However, this argument relies on the skeletal system of modern chondrichthyans (sharks and their relatives), which differ from other gnathostome (jawed vertebrate) groups in not having dermal bones associated with the odontodes. Their external skeleton is also composed of monoodontode 'placoid scales', whereas the scales of most early fossil gnathostomes are polyodontode, i.e. constructed from several odontodes on a shared bony base. Propagation phase contrast X-ray Synchrotron microtomography (PPC-SRµCT) is used to study the polyodontode scales of the early bony fish Andreolepis hedei. The odontodes constructing a single scale are reconstructed in 3D, and a linear and regular growth mechanism similar to that in a gnathostome dentition is confirmed, together with a second, gap-filling growth mechanism. Acanthodian tooth whorls are described, which show that ossification of the whorl base preceded and probably patterned the development of the dental lamina, in contrast to the condition in sharks where the dental lamina develops early and patterns the dentition.The new findings reveal, for the first time, how polyodontode scales grow in 3D in an extinct bony fish. They show that dentition-like odontode patterning occurs on scales and that the primary patterning unit of a tooth whorl may be the bony base rather than the odontodes it carries. These results contradict the hypothesis that oropharyngeal and external odontode skeletons are fundamentally separate and suggest that the importance of dermal bone interactions to odontode patterning has been underestimated.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3741376?pdf=render
spellingShingle Qingming Qu
Sophie Sanchez
Henning Blom
Paul Tafforeau
Per Erik Ahlberg
Scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral 'teeth'.
PLoS ONE
title Scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral 'teeth'.
title_full Scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral 'teeth'.
title_fullStr Scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral 'teeth'.
title_full_unstemmed Scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral 'teeth'.
title_short Scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral 'teeth'.
title_sort scales and tooth whorls of ancient fishes challenge distinction between external and oral teeth
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3741376?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT qingmingqu scalesandtoothwhorlsofancientfisheschallengedistinctionbetweenexternalandoralteeth
AT sophiesanchez scalesandtoothwhorlsofancientfisheschallengedistinctionbetweenexternalandoralteeth
AT henningblom scalesandtoothwhorlsofancientfisheschallengedistinctionbetweenexternalandoralteeth
AT paultafforeau scalesandtoothwhorlsofancientfisheschallengedistinctionbetweenexternalandoralteeth
AT pererikahlberg scalesandtoothwhorlsofancientfisheschallengedistinctionbetweenexternalandoralteeth