Department of Orthodontics, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242, USA.
J Anat. 2010 Jan;216(1):48-61. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2009.01162.x. Epub 2009 Nov 19.
Facial size reduction and facial retraction are key features that distinguish modern humans from archaic Homo. In order to more fully understand the emergence of modern human craniofacial form, it is necessary to understand the underlying evolutionary basis for these defining characteristics. Although it is well established that the cranial base exerts considerable influence on the evolutionary and ontogenetic development of facial form, less emphasis has been placed on developmental factors intrinsic to the facial skeleton proper. The present analysis was designed to assess anteroposterior facial reduction in a pig model and to examine the potential role that this dynamic has played in the evolution of modern human facial form. Ten female sibship cohorts, each consisting of three individuals, were allocated to one of three groups. In the experimental group (n = 10), microplates were affixed bilaterally across the zygomaticomaxillary and frontonasomaxillary sutures at 2 months of age. The sham group (n = 10) received only screw implantation and the controls (n = 10) underwent no surgery. Following 4 months of post-surgical growth, we assessed variation in facial form using linear measurements and principal components analysis of Procrustes scaled landmarks. There were no differences between the control and sham groups; however, the experimental group exhibited a highly significant reduction in facial projection and overall size. These changes were associated with significant differences in the infraorbital region of the experimental group including the presence of an infraorbital depression and an inferiorly and coronally oriented infraorbital plane in contrast to a flat, superiorly and sagittally infraorbital plane in the control and sham groups. These altered configurations are markedly similar to important additional facial features that differentiate modern humans from archaic Homo, and suggest that facial length restriction via rigid plate fixation is a potentially useful model to assess the developmental factors that underlie changing patterns in craniofacial form associated with the emergence of modern humans.
面部缩小和面部后缩是现代人与古人类区别的关键特征。为了更全面地了解现代人类颅面形态的出现,有必要了解这些定义特征的潜在进化基础。尽管已经确立了颅基底对面部形态的进化和个体发育发展有很大的影响,但对面部骨骼本身内在的发育因素的重视程度较低。本分析旨在评估猪模型中的前后面部缩小,并检查这种动态在现代人类面部形态进化中的潜在作用。十个女性同窝队列,每个队列由三个个体组成,被分配到三个组中的一个。在实验组(n=10)中,在 2 个月大时,在颧骨上颌和额鼻上颌缝合处双侧贴上微板。假手术组(n=10)仅接受螺钉植入,对照组(n=10)不接受手术。手术后生长 4 个月后,我们使用线性测量和 Procrustes 比例标志的主成分分析评估面部形态的变化。对照组和假手术组之间没有差异;然而,实验组表现出显著的面部突出度和整体大小减小。这些变化与实验组眶下区域的显著差异相关,包括眶下凹陷和眶下平面向下和冠状方向,而对照组和假手术组的眶下平面是平坦的、向上和矢状方向。这些改变的形态与现代人类与古人类区别的重要额外面部特征非常相似,表明通过刚性板固定限制面部长度是评估潜在有用的模型,可用于评估与现代人类出现相关的颅面形态变化模式的发育因素。