Kawasaki Kazuhiko
Department of Anthropology, Pennsylvania State University, 409 Carpenter Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
Dev Genes Evol. 2009 Mar;219(3):147-57. doi: 10.1007/s00427-009-0276-x. Epub 2009 Mar 3.
The vertebrate tooth is covered with enamel in most sarcopterygians or enameloid in chondrichthyans and actinopterygians. The evolutionary relationship among these two tissues, the hardest tissue in the body, and other mineralized tissues has long been controversial. We have recently reported that specific combinations of secretory calcium-binding phosphoprotein (SCPP) genes are involved in the mineralization of bone, dentin, enameloid, and enamel. Thus, the early repertoire of SCPP genes would elucidate the evolutionary relationship across these tissues. However, the diversity of SCPP genes in teleosts and tetrapods and the roles of these genes in distinct tissues have remained unclear, mainly because many SCPP genes are lineage-specific. In this study, I show that the repertoire of SCPP genes in the zebrafish, frog, and humans includes many lineage-specific genes and some widely conserved genes that originated in stem osteichthyans or earlier. Expression analysis demonstrates that some frog and zebrafish SCPP genes are used primarily in bone, but also in dentin, while the reverse is true of other genes, similar to some mammalian SCPP genes. Dentin and enameloid initially use shared genes in the matrix, but enameloid is subsequently hypermineralized. Notably, enameloid and enamel use an orthologous SCPP gene in the hypermineralization process. Thus, the hypermineralization machinery ancestral to both enameloid and enamel arose before the actinopterygian-sarcopterygian divergence. However, enamel employs specialized SCPPs as structuring proteins, not used in enameloid, reflecting the divergence of enamel from enameloid. These results show graded differences in mineralized dental tissues and reinforce the hypothesis that bone-dentin-enameloid-enamel constitutes an evolutionary continuum.
在大多数肉鳍鱼类中,脊椎动物的牙齿覆盖着牙釉质;而在软骨鱼类和硬骨鱼类中,牙齿覆盖的是类牙釉质。这两种身体中最坚硬的组织与其他矿化组织之间的进化关系长期以来一直存在争议。我们最近报道,分泌型钙结合磷蛋白(SCPP)基因的特定组合参与了骨骼、牙本质、类牙釉质和牙釉质的矿化过程。因此,SCPP基因的早期组成情况将阐明这些组织之间的进化关系。然而,硬骨鱼类和四足动物中SCPP基因的多样性以及这些基因在不同组织中的作用仍不明确,主要是因为许多SCPP基因是谱系特异性的。在本研究中,我发现斑马鱼、青蛙和人类的SCPP基因库包括许多谱系特异性基因以及一些起源于硬骨鱼类祖先或更早时期的广泛保守基因。表达分析表明,一些青蛙和斑马鱼的SCPP基因主要用于骨骼,但也用于牙本质,而其他基因则相反,这与一些哺乳动物的SCPP基因类似。牙本质和类牙釉质最初在基质中使用共享基因,但随后类牙釉质会过度矿化。值得注意的是,类牙釉质和牙釉质在过度矿化过程中使用直系同源的SCPP基因。因此,类牙釉质和牙釉质共有的过度矿化机制出现在辐鳍鱼类和肉鳍鱼类分化之前。然而,牙釉质使用专门的SCPP作为结构蛋白,而类牙釉质中不使用,这反映了牙釉质与类牙釉质的差异。这些结果显示了矿化牙齿组织的分级差异,并强化了骨骼 - 牙本质 - 类牙釉质 - 牙釉质构成进化连续体的假说。