Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, 90095, USA.
Biology Department, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, ME, 04011, USA.
Bioessays. 2020 Jun;42(6):e1900229. doi: 10.1002/bies.201900229. Epub 2020 Apr 29.
Teeth are one of the most fascinating innovations of vertebrates. Their diversity of shape, size, location, and number in vertebrates is astonishing. If the molecular mechanisms underlying the morphogenesis of individual teeth are now relatively well understood, thanks to the detailed experimental work that has been performed in model organisms (mainly mouse and zebrafish), the mechanisms that control the organization of the dentition are still a mystery. Mammals display simplified dentitions when compared to other vertebrates with only a single tooth row positioned in the anterior part of the mouth, whereas other vertebrates exhibit tooth rows in many locations. As proposed 60 years ago, tooth rows can be formed sequentially from an initiator tooth. Recent results in zebrafish have now largely confirmed this hypothesis. Here this observation is generalized upon and it is suggested that in most vertebrates tooth rows could form sequentially from a single initiator tooth.
牙齿是脊椎动物最迷人的创新之一。脊椎动物的牙齿在形状、大小、位置和数量上的多样性令人惊讶。如果说单个牙齿形态发生的分子机制由于在模式生物(主要是老鼠和斑马鱼)中进行的详细实验工作而得到了相对较好的理解,那么控制牙齿排列的机制仍然是一个谜。与其他具有多个牙齿排列位置的脊椎动物相比,哺乳动物的牙齿排列相对简单,只有一排牙齿位于口腔前部。六十年前提出的观点认为,牙齿可以从一个启动牙齿顺序形成。斑马鱼的最新研究结果在很大程度上证实了这一假设。在这里,这一观察结果被推广,并提出在大多数脊椎动物中,牙齿可能从单个启动牙齿顺序形成。