International Center of Future Science, Dinosaur Evolution Research Center, Jilin University, Changchun, China.
The Key-Lab for Evolution of Past Life and Environment in Northeast Asia, Ministry of Education, China, Changchun, China.
PLoS One. 2018 Nov 7;13(11):e0205206. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0205206. eCollection 2018.
The great diversity of dinosaurian tooth shapes and sizes, and in particular, the amazing dental complexity in derived ornithischians has attracted a lot of attention. However, the evolution of dental batteries in hadrosaurids and ceratopsids is difficult to understand without a broader comparative framework. Here we describe tooth histology and development in the "middle" Cretaceous ornithischian dinosaur Changchunsaurus parvus, a small herbivore that has been characterized as an early ornithopod, or even as a more basal ornithischian. We use this taxon to show how a "typical" ornithischian dentition develops, copes with wear, and undergoes tooth replacement. Although in most respects the histological properties of their teeth are similar to those of other dinosaurs, we show that, as in other more derived ornithischians, in C. parvus the pulp chamber is not invaded fully by the newly developing replacement tooth until eruption is nearly complete. This allowed C. parvus to maintain an uninterrupted shearing surface along a single tooth row, while undergoing continuous tooth replacement. Our histological sections also show that the replacement foramina on the lingual surfaces of the jaws are likely the entry points for an externally placed dental lamina, a feature found in many other ornithischian dinosaurs. Surprisingly, our histological analysis also revealed the presence of wavy enamel, the phylogenetically earliest occurrence of this type of tissue. This contradicts previous interpretations that this peculiar type of enamel arose in association with more complex hadrosauroid dentitions. In view of its early appearance, we suggest that wavy enamel may have evolved in association with a shearing-type dentition in a roughly symmetrically-enameled crown, although its precise function still remains somewhat of a mystery.
恐龙牙齿形状和大小的巨大多样性,尤其是衍生的鸟臀目恐龙令人惊叹的牙齿复杂性,引起了很多关注。然而,如果没有更广泛的比较框架,很难理解鸭嘴龙类和角龙类的牙齿电池的进化。在这里,我们描述了“中期”白垩纪鸟臀目恐龙小猎龙的牙齿组织学和发育情况,这是一种小型食草动物,被认为是早期的鸟脚类恐龙,甚至是更基础的鸟臀目恐龙。我们利用这个分类单元来说明典型的鸟臀目牙齿是如何发育、应对磨损和进行换牙的。尽管在大多数方面,它们的牙齿组织学特性与其他恐龙相似,但我们表明,与其他更衍生的鸟臀目恐龙一样,在小猎龙中,新发育的替换牙直到几乎完全萌出时,牙髓腔才完全被其占据。这使得小猎龙能够在单个齿列上保持不间断的剪切表面,同时进行持续的牙齿替换。我们的组织学切片还表明,在颌骨的舌侧表面上的替换孔可能是外部放置的齿质板的入口,这一特征在许多其他鸟臀目恐龙中都有发现。令人惊讶的是,我们的组织学分析还揭示了存在波浪状釉质,这是这种组织类型在系统发育上最早的出现。这与以前的解释相矛盾,以前的解释认为这种特殊类型的釉质是与更复杂的鸭嘴龙类牙齿相关联而产生的。鉴于其早期出现,我们认为波浪状釉质可能与大致对称的釉质冠的剪切型牙齿进化有关,尽管其确切功能仍然有些神秘。