Paléoenvironnements et Paléobiosphère, UMR5125, CNRS, Université Lyon 1, Campus de la Doua, Villeurbanne, France.
BMC Evol Biol. 2010 Jan 27;10:28. doi: 10.1186/1471-2148-10-28.
In wild populations phenotypic differentiation of skeletal structures is influenced by many factors including epigenetic interactions and plastic response to environmental influences, possibly blurring the expression of genetic differences. In contrast, laboratory animals provide the opportunity to separate environmental from genetic effects. The mouse mandible is particularly prone to such plastic variations because bone remodeling occurs late in postnatal ontogeny, in interaction with muscular loading. In order to understand the impact of this process on mandible morphology, we investigated how change in the masticatory function affects the mandible shape, and its pattern of variation. Breeding laboratory mice on food of different consistencies mimicked a natural variation in feeding ecology, whereas mice affected by the murine analogue of the Duchenne muscular dystrophy provided a case of pathological modification of the mastication process.
Food consistency as well as dystrophy caused significant shape changes in the mouse mandible. Further differences were observed between laboratory strains and between sexes within strains, muscular dystrophy causing the largest morphological change. The directions of the morphological changes due to food consistency and muscular dystrophy were discrepant, despite the fact that both are related to bone remodeling. In contrast, directions of greatest variance were comparable among most groups, and the direction of the change due to sexual dimorphism was parallel to the direction of main variance.
Bone remodeling is confirmed as an important factor driving mandible shape differences, evidenced by differences due to both the consistency of the food ingested and muscular dystrophy. However, the resulting shape change will depend on how the masticatory function is affected. Muscular dystrophy caused shape changes distributed all over the mandible, all muscles being affected although possibly to a different degree. In contrast, the chewing function was mostly affected when the mice were fed on hard vs. soft food, whereas grinding likely occurred normally; accordingly, shape change was more localized. The direction of greatest variance, however, was remarkably comparable among groups, although we found a residual variance discarding age, sex, and food differences. This suggests that whatever the context in which bone remodeling occurs, some parts of the mandible such as the angular process are more prone to remodeling during late postnatal growth.
在野生种群中,骨骼结构的表型分化受到许多因素的影响,包括表观遗传相互作用和对环境影响的可塑性反应,这可能会模糊遗传差异的表达。相比之下,实验室动物提供了将环境因素与遗传因素分开的机会。小鼠的下颌骨特别容易发生这种可塑性变化,因为骨重塑发生在出生后发育的后期,与肌肉负荷相互作用。为了了解这个过程对下颌骨形态的影响,我们研究了咀嚼功能的变化如何影响下颌骨的形状及其变异模式。用不同稠度的食物喂养实验室小鼠,模拟了进食生态的自然变化,而受类似于杜氏肌营养不良症的小鼠影响的小鼠则提供了咀嚼过程病理性改变的病例。
食物稠度以及肌肉营养不良症导致了小鼠下颌骨的显著形状变化。在实验室品系之间以及同一品系内的雌雄之间还观察到了进一步的差异,肌肉营养不良症导致了最大的形态变化。尽管两者都与骨重塑有关,但由于食物稠度和肌肉营养不良症引起的形态变化方向不同。相反,大多数组之间的最大变异方向是可比的,并且由于性别二态性引起的变化方向与主要变异方向平行。
骨重塑被证实是驱动下颌骨形状差异的重要因素,这一点可以从由于食物摄入的一致性和肌肉营养不良症引起的差异中得到证明。然而,由此产生的形状变化将取决于咀嚼功能受到的影响程度。肌肉营养不良症导致下颌骨的形状变化分布在整个下颌骨上,尽管可能程度不同,但所有肌肉都受到了影响。相比之下,当小鼠喂食硬食和软食时,咀嚼功能受到的影响最大,而研磨可能正常进行;因此,形状变化更为局限。然而,各组之间的最大变异方向非常相似,尽管我们发现了由于年龄、性别和食物差异而产生的残余方差。这表明,无论骨重塑发生的环境如何,下颌骨的某些部位,如角状突,在出生后发育的后期更易发生重塑。