Stock S R, Ignatiev K I, Dahl T, Veis A, De Carlo F
Institute for Bioengineering and Nanoscience in Advanced Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
J Struct Biol. 2003 Dec;144(3):282-300. doi: 10.1016/j.jsb.2003.09.004.
This paper reports the first noninvasive, volumetric study of entire cross-sections of a sea urchin tooth in which the individual calcite structural elements could be resolved. Two cross-sectionally intact fragments of a Lytechinus variegatus tooth were studied with synchrotron microCT (microcomputed tomography) with 1.66 microm voxels (volume elements). These fragments were from the plumula, that is the tooth zone with rapidly increasing levels of mineral; one fragment was from a position aboral of where the keel developed and the second was from the zone where the keel was developing. The primary plates, secondary plates, carinar process plates, prisms, and elements of the lamellar-needle complex were resolved. Comparison of the microCT data with optical micrographs of stained thin sections confirmed the identifications and measured dimensions of the characteristic microarchitectural features. The interplay of reinforcing structures (plates and prisms) was more clearly revealed in the volumetric numerical data sets than in single or sequential slices. While it is well known that the primary plates and prisms in camarodont teeth are situated to improve resistance to bending (which can be termed primary bending), the data presented provide a new understanding of the mechanical role of the carinar process plates, that is, a geometry consistent with that required in the keel to resist lateral or transverse bending of the tooth about a second axis. The increase in robustness of teeth incorporating lateral keel reinforcement suggests that the relative development of carinar processes (toward a geometry similar to that of L. variegatus) is a character which can be used to infer which sea urchins among the stirodonts are most primitive and among the camarodonts which are more primitive.
本文报告了对海胆牙齿完整横截面的首次非侵入性体积研究,其中可以分辨出单个方解石结构元素。使用具有1.66微米体素(体积元素)的同步加速器微计算机断层扫描(microcomputed tomography,microCT)对两颗完整横截面的长刺海胆(Lytechinus variegatus)牙齿碎片进行了研究。这些碎片来自羽部,即矿物质含量快速增加的牙齿区域;一个碎片来自龙骨发育位置的口背面,另一个来自龙骨正在发育的区域。分辨出了初级板、次级板、龙骨突板、棱柱以及片状针状复合体的元素。将microCT数据与染色薄片的光学显微照片进行比较,证实了特征性微观结构特征的识别和测量尺寸。增强结构(板和棱柱)之间的相互作用在体积数值数据集中比在单个或连续切片中更清晰地显现出来。虽然众所周知,头帕目海胆牙齿中的初级板和棱柱的位置有助于提高抗弯曲能力(可称为初级弯曲),但所呈现的数据为龙骨突板的机械作用提供了新的认识,即其几何形状与龙骨中抵抗牙齿围绕第二轴的侧向或横向弯曲所需的几何形状一致。包含侧向龙骨增强的牙齿的坚固性增加表明,龙骨突(朝着类似于长刺海胆的几何形状发展)的相对发育是一个特征,可用于推断在旋齿目海胆中哪些是最原始的,以及在头帕目海胆中哪些更原始。