Department of Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University School of Dentistry, Dallas, Texas, USA.
Anat Rec (Hoboken). 2024 Sep;307(9):3139-3151. doi: 10.1002/ar.25417. Epub 2024 Feb 23.
The pterion is the sutural juncture of the frontal, parietal, sphenoidal, temporal, and zygomatic bones on the lateral aspect of the cranium. As a craniometric landmark, the pterion has a taxonomic valence, in addition to a common neurosurgical entry point in medicine. Variation in the articulation patterns at the pterion have been documented between primate species yet have a high degree of uniformity within species, suggesting a genetic control for this complex region of the skull. In this study, pterion pattern variation was investigated in 1627 Rhesus macaque crania of the Cayo Santiago colony. The colony's associated skeletal collections accompany known age, sex, and maternal lineages. Pterion pattern prevalence rates were tested against matrilines, as well as cranial shape, and cranial sutural fusion ages (including individuals with prematurely fused sutures). Five patterns were identified, the most prominent being the prevailing Old World Monkey frontotemporal (FT) articulation (83.4%). The relative frequency of those not exhibiting the FT pattern was found to vary considerably between matrilineal families (p = 0.037), ranging from 5.3% to 34.2%. Mothers with the non-FT pterion pattern were three times as likely to bear non-FT offspring. Cranial shape additionally varied with pterion type. Males exhibiting zygomaticotemporal (ZT) and sphenoparietal (SP) articulations possessed a relatively longer and narrower cranium than those with the default FT type (p = < 0.001). Cranial sutural fusion ages were not found to differ between pterion types, though all individuals with craniosynostosis (6; 0.38%) exhibited the FT type. The study provided strong evidence for a genetic source for pterion pattern as well as outlining a relatively novel relationship with cranial shape and sutural fusion ages. A unifying explanation may lie in those genes involved in both sutural and craniofacial development, or in the variation of brain growth processes channeling sutural articulation at the pterion. Both may be heritable and responsible for producing observed matrilineal differences in the pterion.
翼点是颅骨侧面额骨、顶骨、蝶骨、颞骨和颧骨的缝合连接处。作为一种头测量学标志,翼点除了在医学上是常见的神经外科入点外,还有分类学上的意义。已经记录了灵长类动物物种之间翼点的连接模式存在差异,但在物种内部具有高度的统一性,这表明颅骨这一复杂区域存在遗传控制。在这项研究中,对 1627 只来自卡约圣地亚哥群体的恒河猴颅骨的翼点模式变化进行了研究。该群体的相关骨骼标本伴随着已知的年龄、性别和母系。翼点模式的流行率与母系以及颅骨形状和颅骨缝合融合年龄(包括那些过早融合的缝合线的个体)进行了测试。共确定了 5 种模式,最常见的是普遍存在的旧世界猴额颞(FT)连接(83.4%)。发现在不同母系家族中,不表现出 FT 模式的相对频率差异很大(p=0.037),范围从 5.3%到 34.2%。具有非 FT 翼点模式的母亲生非 FT 后代的可能性是三倍。颅骨形状也随翼点类型而变化。表现出颧骨颞(ZT)和蝶顶(SP)连接的男性比具有默认 FT 类型的男性具有相对更长和更窄的颅骨(p<0.001)。翼点类型之间没有发现颅骨缝合融合年龄的差异,尽管所有颅缝早闭的个体(6 个;0.38%)都表现出 FT 类型。该研究为翼点模式的遗传来源提供了强有力的证据,并概述了与颅骨形状和缝合融合年龄相对较新的关系。一个统一的解释可能在于那些参与缝合和颅面发育的基因,或者在于大脑生长过程的变化导致翼点处的缝合连接。这两者都可能是可遗传的,并负责产生观察到的翼点在母系之间的差异。