White Heather E, Goswami Anjali, Tucker Abigail S
Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom.
Centre for Craniofacial and Regenerative Biology, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
Front Cell Dev Biol. 2021 Mar 26;9:653579. doi: 10.3389/fcell.2021.653579. eCollection 2021.
Phenotypic variation across mammals is extensive and reflects their ecological diversification into a remarkable range of habitats on every continent and in every ocean. The skull performs many functions to enable each species to thrive within its unique ecological niche, from prey acquisition, feeding, sensory capture (supporting vision and hearing) to brain protection. Diversity of skull function is reflected by its complex and highly variable morphology. Cranial morphology can be quantified using geometric morphometric techniques to offer invaluable insights into evolutionary patterns, ecomorphology, development, taxonomy, and phylogenetics. Therefore, the skull is one of the best suited skeletal elements for developmental and evolutionary analyses. In contrast, less attention is dedicated to the fibrous sutural joints separating the cranial bones. Throughout postnatal craniofacial development, sutures function as sites of bone growth, accommodating expansion of a growing brain. As growth frontiers, cranial sutures are actively responsible for the size and shape of the cranial bones, with overall skull shape being altered by changes to both the level and time period of activity of a given cranial suture. In keeping with this, pathological premature closure of sutures postnatally causes profound misshaping of the skull (craniosynostosis). Beyond this crucial role, sutures also function postnatally to provide locomotive shock absorption, allow joint mobility during feeding, and, in later postnatal stages, suture fusion acts to protect the developed brain. All these sutural functions have a clear impact on overall cranial function, development and morphology, and highlight the importance that patterns of suture development have in shaping the diversity of cranial morphology across taxa. Here we focus on the mammalian cranial system and review the intrinsic relationship between suture development and morphology and cranial shape from an evolutionary developmental biology perspective, with a view to understanding the influence of sutures on evolutionary diversity. Future work integrating suture development into a comparative evolutionary framework will be instrumental to understanding how developmental mechanisms shaping sutures ultimately influence evolutionary diversity.
哺乳动物的表型变异十分广泛,反映出它们在各大洲和各大洋的各种栖息地中实现了生态多样化。颅骨具有多种功能,使每个物种都能在其独特的生态位中茁壮成长,这些功能包括捕食、进食、感官捕捉(支持视觉和听觉)以及保护大脑。颅骨功能的多样性通过其复杂且高度可变的形态得以体现。可以使用几何形态测量技术对颅骨形态进行量化,从而为进化模式、生态形态学、发育、分类学和系统发育学提供宝贵的见解。因此,颅骨是发育和进化分析中最适合的骨骼元素之一。相比之下,人们对分隔颅骨的纤维性缝合关节关注较少。在整个出生后颅面发育过程中,缝合线作为骨骼生长的部位,适应不断生长的大脑的扩张。作为生长前沿,颅骨缝合线积极影响颅骨的大小和形状,颅骨的整体形状会因特定颅骨缝合线的活动水平和时间段的变化而改变。与此一致的是,出生后缝合线的病理性过早闭合会导致颅骨严重变形(颅缝早闭)。除了这一关键作用外,缝合线在出生后还具有吸收运动冲击、在进食时允许关节活动的功能,并且在出生后后期,缝合线融合起到保护发育成熟大脑的作用。所有这些缝合线功能都对颅骨的整体功能、发育和形态产生明显影响,并突出了缝合线发育模式在塑造不同分类群颅骨形态多样性方面的重要性。在这里,我们聚焦于哺乳动物的颅骨系统,从进化发育生物学的角度回顾缝合线发育与形态以及颅骨形状之间的内在关系,以期理解缝合线对进化多样性的影响。未来将缝合线发育整合到比较进化框架中的工作,将有助于理解塑造缝合线的发育机制最终如何影响进化多样性。