Fong Raymond K M, LeBlanc Aaron R H, Berman David S, Reisz Robert R
Department of Biology, University of Toronto, Mississauga, Ontario, L5L 1C6, Canada.
Vertebrate Paleontology, Carnegie Museum of Natural History, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
J Morphol. 2016 Jul;277(7):916-24. doi: 10.1002/jmor.20545. Epub 2016 Apr 18.
Studies of dinosaur teeth have focused primarily on external crown morphology and thus, use shed or in situ tooth crowns, and are limited to the enamel and dentine dental tissues. As a result, the full suites of periodontal tissues that attach teeth to the jaws remain poorly documented, particularly in early dinosaurs. These tissues are an integral part of the tooth and thus essential to a more complete understanding of dental anatomy, development, and evolution in dinosaurs. To identify the tooth attachment tissues in early dinosaurs, histological thin sections were prepared from the maxilla and dentary of a partial skull of the early theropod Coelophysis bauri from the Upper Triassic (Rhaetian- 209-201 Ma) Whitaker Quarry, New Mexico, USA. As one of the phylogenetically and geologically oldest dinosaurs, it is an ideal candidate for examining dental tissues near the base of the dinosaurian clade. The teeth of C. bauri exhibited a fibrous tooth attachment in which the teeth possessed five tissues: enamel, dentine, cementum, periodontal ligament (PDL), and alveolar bone. Our findings, coupled with those of more recent studies of ornithischian teeth, indicate that a tripartite periodontium, similar to that of crocodilians and mammals, is the plesiomorphic condition for dinosaurs. The occurrence of a tripartite periodontium in dinosaurs adds to the growing consensus that the presence of these tissues is the plesiomorphic condition for the major amniote clades. Furthermore, this study establishes the relative timing of tissue development and growth directions of periodontal tissues and provides the first comparative framework for future studies of dinosaur periodontal development, tooth replacement, and histology. J. Morphol. 277:916-924, 2016. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
对恐龙牙齿的研究主要集中在牙冠外部形态上,因此使用的是脱落的或原位的牙冠,并且仅限于牙釉质和牙本质这两种牙齿组织。结果,将牙齿与颌骨相连的整套牙周组织的记录仍然很少,尤其是在早期恐龙中。这些组织是牙齿不可或缺的一部分,因此对于更全面地了解恐龙的牙齿解剖结构、发育和进化至关重要。为了确定早期恐龙的牙齿附着组织,我们从美国新墨西哥州上三叠统(瑞替阶,209 - 201百万年前)惠特克采石场的早期兽脚亚目腔骨龙的部分头骨的上颌骨和齿骨制备了组织学薄片。作为系统发育和地质年代最古老的恐龙之一,它是研究恐龙类基部附近牙齿组织的理想候选对象。腔骨龙的牙齿呈现出纤维性牙齿附着,其中牙齿具有五种组织:牙釉质、牙本质、牙骨质、牙周韧带(PDL)和牙槽骨。我们的发现,再加上最近对鸟臀目牙齿的研究结果,表明与鳄鱼和哺乳动物类似的三方牙周组织是恐龙类的原始状态。恐龙中三方牙周组织的出现进一步支持了越来越多的共识,即这些组织的存在是主要羊膜动物类群的原始状态。此外,本研究确定了牙周组织发育的相对时间和生长方向,并为未来恐龙牙周发育、牙齿替换和组织学研究提供了第一个比较框架。《形态学杂志》277:916 - 924,2016年。© 2016威利期刊公司