Literature DB >> 32388865

Architectural and ultrastructural features of tessellated calcified cartilage in modern and extinct chondrichthyan fishes.

John G Maisey1, John S S Denton2, Carole Burrow3, Alan Pradel4.   

Abstract

Tessellated calcified cartilage (TCC) is a distinctive kind of biomineralized perichondral tissue found in many modern and extinct chondrichthyans (sharks, rays, chimaeroids and their extinct allies). Customarily, this feature has been treated somewhat superficially in phylogenetic analyses, often as a single "defining" character of a chondrichthyan clade. TCC is actually a complex hard tissue with numerous distinctive attributes, but its use as a character complex for phylogenetic analysis has not yet been optimized. This study attempts to improve this situation by presenting new terminology for certain aspects of tesseral architecture, including single-monolayered, multiple-monolayered, polylayered and voussoir tesserae; new histological data, including thin sections of TCC in several Palaeozoic taxa, and new proposals for ways in which various characters and states (many of which are defined here for the first time) could be applied in future phylogenetic analyses of chondrichthyan fishes. It can be concluded that many, but not all, of the unique attributes of modern TCC evolved by the Early Devonian (ca. 400 before present (bp)). The globular calcified cartilage reported in Silurian sinacanthids and the so-called subtessellated perichondral biomineralization (with irregular and ill-defined geometries of a layer or layers of calcified cartilage blocks) of certain extinct "acanthodians" (e.g., Climatius, Ischnacanthus, Cheiracanthus) could represent evolutionary precursors of TCC, which seems to characterize only part of the chondrichthyan total group. It is hypothesized that heavily biomineralized "layer-cake" TCC in certain Palaeozoic chondrichthyans perhaps served a dual physiological role, as a phosphate sink and in providing increased skeletal density in very large (>7 m) Devonian-Permian marine sharks such as ctenacanths and as an adaptation to calcium-deficient environments among Permo-Carboniferous non-marine sharks such as xenacanths. By contrast, the equivalent tissue in modern elasmobranchs probably serves only to reinforce regions of cartilage (mostly in the jaws) subjected to high loading. It is also noted that much of the variation observed in tesseral architecture (including localized remodelling), ultrastructure and histology in modern and extinct chondrichthyans is confined to the perichondrally facing cap zone (where Type-1 collagen matrix predominates in modern TCC), whereas the main body of the tessera (where Type-2 collagen matrix predominates) exhibits comparatively little evidence of remodelling and histological or structural variation.
© 2020 The Fisheries Society of the British Isles.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biomineralization; cartilage; chondrichthyans; evolution; tesserae

Year:  2020        PMID: 32388865     DOI: 10.1111/jfb.14376

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Fish Biol        ISSN: 0022-1112            Impact factor:   2.051


  4 in total

1.  Mineralization of the Callorhinchus Vertebral Column (Holocephali; Chondrichthyes).

Authors:  Jacob B Pears; Zerina Johanson; Kate Trinajstic; Mason N Dean; Catherine A Boisvert
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2020-11-26       Impact factor: 4.599

Review 2.  Mineralized Cartilage and Bone-Like Tissues in Chondrichthyans Offer Potential Insights Into the Evolution and Development of Mineralized Tissues in the Vertebrate Endoskeleton.

Authors:  Oghenevwogaga J Atake; B Frank Eames
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2021-12-22       Impact factor: 4.599

3.  Ontogeny of a tessellated surface: Carapace growth of the longhorn cowfish Lactoria cornuta.

Authors:  Lennart Eigen; Daniel Baum; Mason N Dean; Daniel Werner; Jan Wölfer; John A Nyakatura
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2022-05-31       Impact factor: 2.921

4.  Endoskeletal mineralization in chimaera and a comparative guide to tessellated cartilage in chondrichthyan fishes (sharks, rays and chimaera).

Authors:  Ronald Seidel; Michael Blumer; Júlia Chaumel; Shahrouz Amini; Mason N Dean
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2020-10-14       Impact factor: 4.118

  4 in total

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