Stelzer Stefanie, Gunz Philipp, Neubauer Simon, Spoor Fred
Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig 04103, Germany.
Department of Human Evolution, Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig 04103, Germany.
J Hum Evol. 2017 Jun;107:71-85. doi: 10.1016/j.jhevol.2017.02.010. Epub 2017 May 3.
The shape of the dental arcade and canine size distinguish extant humans from all apes. Humans are characterized by a parabolic arcade with short postcanine tooth rows and small canines, whereas apes have long, U-shaped arcades with large canines. The evolutionary and biomechanical mechanisms underlying arcade shape differences between and within groups are not well understood. It is unclear, for example, whether evolutionary changes in the covariation among modules comprising the upper and lower jaws are the cause and/or consequence of different arcade shapes. Here we use 3D geometric morphometric methods to explore to what extent the morphological differences in arcade shape between living hominoids are related to differences in covariation of upper and lower jaws, and the premaxilla and the maxilla. We show that all extant hominoids follow a very similar covariation pattern between upper and lower dental arcades, as well as between the premaxilla and the maxilla. We find comparably high magnitudes of covariation between the premaxilla and the maxilla in all groups. Between the upper and lower jaws, levels of covariation are similar in apes (Pan, Gorilla, Pongo, and Hylobates), but overall lower in extant humans. Our results demonstrate an independence of the pattern of arcade shape covariation from dental spatial arrangements. Importantly, we show that a shared hominoid pattern of covariation between premaxilla and maxilla together with the covariation of upper and lower jaw is consistent with major evolutionary arcade shape changes in hominoids. We suggest that with the reduction of canine and diastema size in hominins, the incisors move posteriorly and the tooth row becomes more parabolic. Our study provides a framework for addressing questions about fossil hominin dentognathic diversity, including inter- and intraspecific variation and associations of upper and lower jaw morphology.
牙弓形状和犬齿大小将现存人类与所有猿类区分开来。人类的特征是具有抛物线形牙弓,犬齿后牙列短且犬齿小,而猿类则具有长的U形牙弓和大的犬齿。群体之间和群体内部牙弓形状差异背后的进化和生物力学机制尚未得到很好的理解。例如,尚不清楚构成上下颌的模块之间协变的进化变化是不同牙弓形状的原因和/或结果。在这里,我们使用三维几何形态测量方法来探究现存类人猿牙弓形状的形态差异在多大程度上与上下颌以及前颌骨和上颌骨协变的差异相关。我们表明,所有现存类人猿在上下颌牙弓之间以及前颌骨和上颌骨之间都遵循非常相似的协变模式。我们发现在所有群体中,前颌骨和上颌骨之间的协变程度相当高。在上下颌之间,猿类(黑猩猩、大猩猩、猩猩和长臂猿)的协变水平相似,但现存人类的总体协变水平较低。我们的结果表明牙弓形状协变模式与牙齿空间排列无关。重要的是,我们表明前颌骨和上颌骨之间共同的类人猿协变模式以及上下颌的协变与类人猿主要的进化牙弓形状变化是一致的。我们认为,随着人类犬齿和牙间隙尺寸的减小,门牙向后移动,牙列变得更加呈抛物线形。我们的研究为解决有关化石人类牙齿颌骨多样性的问题提供了一个框架,包括种间和种内变异以及上下颌形态的关联。