1. Development of cyclic shedding teeth from semi-shedding teeth : the inner dental arcade of the stem osteichthyan Lophosteus
- Author
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Henning Blom, Paul Tafforeau, Tiiu Märss, Sophie Sanchez, Donglei Chen, and Per E. Ahlberg
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,010506 paleontology ,Dental anatomy ,Polyphyodont ,Odontode ,three-dimensional palaeohistology ,Biology ,synchrotron microtomography ,01 natural sciences ,Evolutionsbiologi ,03 medical and health sciences ,stomatognathic system ,evolution of gnathostome dentition ,lcsh:Science ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Evolutionary Biology ,Multidisciplinary ,inner dental arcade ,Biology (Whole Organism) ,Lophosteus ,Anatomy ,biology.organism_classification ,stomatognathic diseases ,030104 developmental biology ,FRELON CAMERA ,Dental arcade ,Synchrotron microtomography ,lcsh:Q ,tooth replacement ,stem osteichthyans ,Research Article - Abstract
The numerous cushion-shaped tooth-bearing plates attributed to the stem group osteichthyan Lophosteus superbus , which are argued here to represent an early form of the osteichthyan inner dental arcade, display a previously unknown and presumably primitive mode of tooth shedding by basal hard tissue resorption. They carry regularly spaced, recumbent, gently recurved teeth arranged in transverse tooth files that diverge towards the lingual margin of the cushion. Three-dimensional reconstruction from propagation phase-contrast synchrotron microtomography (PPC-SRµCT) reveals remnants of the first-generation teeth embedded in the basal plate, a feature never previously observed in any taxon. These teeth were shed by semi-basal resorption with the periphery of their bases retained as dentine rings. The rings are highly overlapped, which evidences tooth shedding prior to adding the next first-generation tooth at the growing edge of the plate. The first generation of teeth is thus diachronous. Successor teeth at the same sites underwent cyclical replacing and shedding through basal resorption, producing stacks of buried resorption surfaces separated by bone of attachment. The number and spatial arrangement of resorption surfaces elucidates that basal resorption of replacement teeth had taken place at the older tooth sites before the addition of the youngest first-generation teeth at the lingual margin. Thus, the replacement tooth buds cannot have been generated by a single permanent dental lamina at the lingual edge of the tooth cushion, but must have arisen either from successional dental laminae associated with the individual predecessor teeth, or directly from the dental epithelium of these teeth. The virtual histological dissection of these Late Silurian microfossils broadens our understanding of the development of the gnathostome dental systems and the acquisition of the osteichthyan-type of tooth replacement.
- Published
- 2017