Gai Zhikun, Yu Xiaobo, Zhu Min
Key Laboratory of Vertebrate Evolution and Human Origins of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, 100044, China.
Department of Biological Sciences, Kean University, Union, New Jersey.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2017 Jan;300(1):16-29. doi: 10.1002/ar.23512.
Establishing the homology of the zygomatic or jugal bone and tracing its origin and early evolution represents a complex issue because of large morphological gaps between various groups of vertebrates. Using recent paleontological findings, we discuss the deep homology of the zygomatic or jugal bone in stem gnathostomes (placoderms) and examine its homology and modifications in crown gnathostomes (acanthodians, chondrichthyans and osteichthyans). The discovery of the placoderm Entelognathus from the Silurian of China (∼423 million years ago) established that the large dermal plates in placoderms and osteichthyans are homologous. In Entelognathus, the jugal was joined by a new set of bones (premaxilla, maxilla, and lachrymal), marking the first appearance of the typical vertebrate face found in tetrapods including humans. In non-Entelognathus placoderms, the jugal (homologized with the suborbital plate) occupied most of the cheek region and covered the palatoquadrate laterally. In antiarch placoderms (the most basal jawed vertebrates), the jugal (represented by the ventrally positioned mental plate) functioned as part of the upper jaw. In osteichthyans, the preopercular arose as a novel bone and separated the jugal from the opercular in piscine osteichthyans. A single bone in basal osteichthyans, the preopercular may have divided into two or three elements (the preopercular, the squamosal and/or the quadratojugal) in several later osteichthyan groups. Subsequent modifications of the jugal in the fish-tetrapod transition (its enlargement leading to its contact with the quadratojugal and the separation of the squamosal from the maxilla) brought the vertebrate face to the typical model we see in living tetrapods. Anat Rec, 300:16-29, 2017. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
由于不同类群脊椎动物之间存在巨大的形态学差异,确定颧骨或眶后骨的同源性并追溯其起源和早期演化是一个复杂的问题。利用最近的古生物学发现,我们讨论了干群有颌类(盾皮鱼)中颧骨或眶后骨的深层同源性,并研究了其在冠群有颌类(棘鱼、软骨鱼和硬骨鱼)中的同源性及形态变化。在中国志留纪(约4.23亿年前)发现的盾皮鱼全颌鱼证实,盾皮鱼和硬骨鱼中的大型真皮板是同源的。在全颌鱼中,眶后骨与一组新骨(前颌骨、上颌骨和泪骨)相连,标志着包括人类在内的四足动物中典型脊椎动物面部的首次出现。在非全颌盾皮鱼中,眶后骨(与眶下板同源)占据了大部分颊区,并在侧面覆盖了腭方骨。在瓣甲鱼目盾皮鱼(最基部的有颌脊椎动物)中,眶后骨(由腹侧的颏板代表)起到上颌一部分的作用。在硬骨鱼中,前鳃盖骨作为一块新骨出现,并在硬骨鱼纲鱼类中将眶后骨与鳃盖骨分开。在基部硬骨鱼中为单一骨骼的前鳃盖骨,在一些晚期硬骨鱼类群中可能分为两个或三个部分(前鳃盖骨、鳞骨和/或方颧骨)。随后在鱼类 -四足动物过渡过程中眶后骨的形态变化(其增大导致与方颧骨接触以及鳞骨与上颌骨分离)使脊椎动物面部形成了我们在现存四足动物中看到的典型模式。《解剖学记录》,300:16 - 29,2017年。© 2016威利期刊公司