Cadena Edwin-Alberto
Facultad de Ciencias Naturales, Grupo de Investigación Paleontología Neotropical Tradicional y Molecular (PaleoNeo), Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá, Colombia.
Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Panama City, Panama.
PeerJ. 2020 Aug 27;8:e9833. doi: 10.7717/peerj.9833. eCollection 2020.
Osteocytes and blood vessels are the main cellular and tissue components of the bone tissue of vertebrates. Evidence of these soft-tissue microstructures has been widely documented in the fossil record of Mesozoic and Cenozoic turtles. However, all these studies have characterized morphologically and elementally these microstructures via isolation from the fossilized bone matrix where they were preserved or in ground sections, which could raise skepticism about the results due to potential cross-contamination or reagents effects. Fossil turtle bones from three different localities with distinct preservation environments and geological settings, including from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia, from the Eocene of Germany, and a podocnemidid indet. from the Miocene of Colombia are studied here. Bone from two extant turtle species, , and , as well as a commercial chicken were used for comparisons. Scanning Electron Microscopy-Energy Dispersive Spectroscopy analyses performed directly on untreated fresh surfaces show that osteocytes-like in the fossil turtle bone are mostly composed of iron and manganese. In contrast, the in situ blood vessels-like of the fossil turtles, as well as those from the extant taxa are rich in elements typically organic in origin (carbon and nitrogen), which are absent to minimally present in the surrounding bone or rock matrix; this suggests a possible endogenous composition for these fossil structures. Also, the results presented here show that although originally both (osteocytes and blood vessels) are organic soft components of bone as evidenced in the extant turtles and chicken, they can experience completely different preservational pathways only microns away from each other in the same fossil bone.
骨细胞和血管是脊椎动物骨组织的主要细胞和组织成分。这些软组织微观结构的证据在中生代和新生代龟类的化石记录中已有广泛记载。然而,所有这些研究都是通过从保存它们的化石骨基质中分离或在磨片上来对这些微观结构进行形态学和元素分析的,由于潜在的交叉污染或试剂影响,这可能会引发对结果的质疑。本文研究了来自三个不同产地、具有不同保存环境和地质背景的化石龟骨,包括来自蒙古晚白垩世的、来自德国始新世的以及来自哥伦比亚中新世的一种未定种侧颈龟。还使用了两种现存龟类物种的骨骼以及一只商品鸡的骨骼进行比较。直接在未经处理的新鲜表面上进行的扫描电子显微镜 - 能量色散光谱分析表明,化石龟骨中的类骨细胞主要由铁和锰组成。相比之下,化石龟原位的类血管结构以及现存类群的类血管结构富含通常源于有机物的元素(碳和氮),而这些元素在周围的骨骼或岩石基质中不存在或含量极低;这表明这些化石结构可能具有内源性组成。此外,本文给出的结果表明,尽管在现存龟类和鸡中,骨细胞和血管最初都是骨的有机软成分,但在同一化石骨中,它们仅相隔几微米却可能经历完全不同的保存途径。