Medical Anatomical Sciences Department, College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific, Western University of Health Sciences, Pomona, California, USA.
Department of Basic Medical Sciences, University of Arizona College of Medicine-Phoenix, Phoenix, Arizona, USA.
Am J Biol Anthropol. 2024 Mar;183(3):e24788. doi: 10.1002/ajpa.24788. Epub 2023 Jun 7.
Differences between adult humans and great apes in cervical vertebral morphology are well documented, but the ontogeny of this variation is still largely unexplored. This study examines patterns of growth in functionally relevant features of C1, C2, C4, and C6 in extant humans and apes to understand the development of their disparate morphologies.
Linear and angular measurements were taken from 530 cervical vertebrae representing 146 individual humans, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans. Specimens were divided into three age-categories based on dental eruption: juvenile, adolescent, and adult. Inter- and intraspecific comparisons were evaluated using resampling methods.
Of the eighteen variables examined here, seven distinguish humans from apes at the adult stage. Human-ape differences in features related to atlantoaxial joint function tend to be established by the juvenile stage, whereas differences in features related to the nuchal musculature and movement of the subaxial elements do not fully emerge until adolescence or later. The orientation of the odontoid process-often cited as a feature that distinguishes humans from apes-is similar in adult humans and adult chimpanzees, but the developmental patterns are distinct, with human adultlike morphology being achieved much earlier.
The biomechanical consequences of the variation observed here is poorly understood. Whether the differences in growth patterns represent functional links to cranial development or postural changes, or both, requires additional investigation. Determining when humanlike ontogenetic patterns evolved in hominins may provide insight into the functional basis driving the morphological divergence between extant humans and apes.
成人与大型猿类在颈椎形态上的差异已有充分的文献记载,但这种变异的发生机制在很大程度上仍未得到探索。本研究通过研究现生人类和猿类 C1、C2、C4 和 C6 与功能相关的特征的生长模式,来了解它们不同形态的发育过程。
本研究从代表 146 个人类、黑猩猩、大猩猩和猩猩的 530 个颈椎中获取了线性和角度测量值。根据牙齿萌出情况,将标本分为 3 个年龄组:幼年组、青少年组和成年组。采用重采样方法对种间和种内差异进行了评估。
在本研究中检查的十八个变量中,有七个在成年阶段将人类与猿类区分开来。与寰枢关节功能相关的特征的人类-猿类差异往往在幼年阶段就已经确立,而与颈后肌群和下颈椎运动相关的特征的差异直到青少年或更晚才完全显现。齿状突的方向——常被认为是区分人类和猿类的特征之一——在成年人类和成年黑猩猩中是相似的,但发育模式是不同的,人类成年样的形态在更早的时候就已经形成。
目前对这里观察到的变异的生物力学后果知之甚少。生长模式的差异是否代表了与颅骨发育或姿势变化的功能联系,或者两者兼有,这需要进一步的研究。确定人类样的发生模式在人属中的进化时间可能有助于深入了解导致现生人类和猿类之间形态差异的功能基础。