Literature DB >> 27145214

Early development and replacement of the stickleback dentition.

Nicholas A Ellis1, Nikunj N Donde1, Craig T Miller1.   

Abstract

Teeth have long served as a model system to study basic questions about vertebrate organogenesis, morphogenesis, and evolution. In nonmammalian vertebrates, teeth typically regenerate throughout adult life. Fish have evolved a tremendous diversity in dental patterning in both their oral and pharyngeal dentitions, offering numerous opportunities to study how morphology develops, regenerates, and evolves in different lineages. Threespine stickleback fish (Gasterosteus aculeatus) have emerged as a new system to study how morphology evolves, and provide a particularly powerful system to study the development and evolution of dental morphology. Here, we describe the oral and pharyngeal dentitions of stickleback fish, providing additional morphological, histological, and molecular evidence for homology of oral and pharyngeal teeth. Focusing on the ventral pharyngeal dentition in a dense developmental time course of lab-reared fish, we describe the temporal and spatial consensus sequence of early tooth formation. Early in development, this sequence is highly stereotypical and consists of seventeen primary teeth forming the early tooth field, followed by the first tooth replacement event. Comparing this detailed morphological and ontogenetic sequence to that described in other fish reveals that major changes to how dental morphology arises and regenerates have evolved across different fish lineages. J. Morphol. 277:1072-1083, 2016.
© 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  polyphyodonty; regeneration; stickleback; teeth; tooth patterning

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27145214      PMCID: PMC5298556          DOI: 10.1002/jmor.20557

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Morphol        ISSN: 0022-2887            Impact factor:   1.804


  68 in total

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  3 in total

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3.  Evolved Bmp6 enhancer alleles drive spatial shifts in gene expression during tooth development in sticklebacks.

Authors:  Mark D Stepaniak; Tyler A Square; Craig T Miller
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  3 in total

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