| Literature DB >> 34702071 |
M R Whitney1, K D Angielczyk2, B R Peecook3, C A Sidor4.
Abstract
The mammalian tusk is a unique and extreme morphotype among modern vertebrate dentitions. Tusks-defined here as ever-growing incisors or canines composed of dentine-evolved independently multiple times within mammals yet have not evolved in other extant vertebrates. This suggests that there is a feature specific to mammals that facilitates the evolution of this specialized dentition. To investigate what may underpin the evolution of tusks, we histologically sampled the tusks of dicynodont therapsids: the earliest iteration of tusk evolution and the only non-mammalian synapsid clade to have acquired such a dentition. We studied the tissue composition, attachment tissues, development and replacement in 10 dicynodont taxa and show multiple developmental pathways for the adult dentitions of dicynodont tusks and tusk-like caniniforms. In a phylogenetic context, these developmental pathways reveal an evolutionary scenario for the acquisition of an ever-growing tusk-an event that occurred convergently, but only in derived members of our sample. We propose that the evolution of an ever-growing dentition, such as a tusk, is predicated on the evolution of significantly reduced tooth replacement and a permanent soft-tissue attachment. Both of these features are fixed in the dentitions of crown-group mammals, which helps to explain why tusks are restricted to this clade among extant vertebrates.Entities:
Keywords: Dicynodontia; Permian; Synapsida; Triassic; histology; tusk
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34702071 PMCID: PMC8548784 DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.1670
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Biol Sci ISSN: 0962-8452 Impact factor: 5.349