LeBlanc Aaron R H, Reisz Robert R, Evans David C, Bailleul Alida M
Department of Biology, University of Toronto Mississauga, Mississauga, ON, L5L 1C6, Canada.
Department of Optics and Photonics, National Central University, Jhongli City, Taoyuan, 32001, Taiwan.
BMC Evol Biol. 2016 Jul 28;16:152. doi: 10.1186/s12862-016-0721-1.
Hadrosaurid dinosaurs, dominant Late Cretaceous herbivores, possessed complex dental batteries with up to 300 teeth in each jaw ramus. Despite extensive interest in the adaptive significance of the dental battery, surprisingly little is known about how the battery evolved from the ancestral dinosaurian dentition, or how it functioned in the living organism. We undertook the first comprehensive, tissue-level study of dental ontogeny in hadrosaurids using several intact maxillary and dentary batteries and compared them to sections of other archosaurs and mammals. We used these comparisons to pinpoint shifts in the ancestral reptilian pattern of tooth ontogeny that allowed hadrosaurids to form complex dental batteries.
Comparisons of hadrosaurid dental ontogeny with that of other amniotes reveals that the ability to halt normal tooth replacement and functionalize the tooth root into the occlusal surface was key to the evolution of dental batteries. The retention of older generations of teeth was driven by acceleration in the timing and rate of dental tissue formation. The hadrosaurid dental battery is a highly modified form of the typical dinosaurian gomphosis with a unique tooth-to-tooth attachment that permitted constant and perfectly timed tooth eruption along the whole battery.
We demonstrate that each battery was a highly dynamic, integrated matrix of living replacement and, remarkably, dead grinding teeth connected by a network of ligaments that permitted fine scale flexibility within the battery. The hadrosaurid dental battery, the most complex in vertebrate evolution, conforms to a surprisingly simple evolutionary model in which ancestral reptilian tissue types were redeployed in a unique manner. The hadrosaurid dental battery thus allows us to follow in great detail the development and extended life history of a particularly complex food processing system, providing novel insights into how tooth development can be altered to produce complex dentitions, the likes of which do not exist in any living vertebrate.
鸭嘴龙类恐龙是白垩纪晚期占主导地位的食草动物,其颌骨支具有复杂的齿系,每侧颌骨多达300颗牙齿。尽管人们对齿系的适应性意义有着广泛的兴趣,但令人惊讶的是,对于齿系如何从恐龙的祖先牙列演化而来,或者它在生物体中如何发挥功能,我们却知之甚少。我们利用几块完整的上颌和齿骨齿系,对鸭嘴龙类的牙齿个体发育进行了首次全面的组织水平研究,并将其与其他主龙类和哺乳动物的切片进行了比较。我们通过这些比较来确定恐龙祖先牙齿个体发育模式中的变化,正是这些变化使得鸭嘴龙类能够形成复杂的齿系。
将鸭嘴龙类的牙齿个体发育与其他羊膜动物进行比较发现,停止正常的牙齿替换并使牙根在咬合面发挥功能的能力是齿系演化的关键。老一代牙齿的保留是由牙齿组织形成的时间和速度加快所驱动的。鸭嘴龙类的齿系是典型恐龙槽生齿的一种高度特化形式,具有独特的齿间附着方式,使得整个齿系能够持续且完美定时地萌出牙齿。
我们证明,每个齿系都是一个高度动态、整合的活体替换齿和(显著的)死磨齿的基质,它们通过韧带网络相连,使得齿系内部具有精细的灵活性。鸭嘴龙类的齿系是脊椎动物进化中最复杂的,它符合一个惊人简单的进化模型,即恐龙祖先的组织类型以独特的方式重新部署。因此,鸭嘴龙类的齿系使我们能够详细追踪一个特别复杂的食物处理系统的发育和延长的生命历程,为牙齿发育如何被改变以产生复杂齿列提供了新的见解,这种齿列在任何现存脊椎动物中都不存在。