| Literature DB >> 35298510 |
Valentin L Fischer1, Daniela E Winkler2,3, Robert Głogowski4, Thomas Attin5, Jean-Michel Hatt1, Marcus Clauss1, Florian Wegehaupt5.
Abstract
Hypselodont (ever-growing) teeth of lagomorphs or rodents have higher wear rates (of a magnitude of mm/week), with compensating growth rates, compared to the non-ever-growing teeth of ungulates (with a magnitude of mm/year). Whether this is due to a fundamental difference in enamel hardness has not been investigated so far. We prepared enamel samples (n = 120 per species) from incisors of cattle (Bos primigenius taurus) and nutria (Myocastor coypus, hypselodont incisors) taken at slaughterhouses, and submitted them to indentation hardness testing. Subsequently, samples were split into 4 groups per species (n = 24 per species and group) that were assessed for abrasion susceptibility by a standardized brush test with a control (no added abrasives) and three treatment groups (using fine silt at 4 ±1 μm particle size, volcanic ash at 96 ±9 μm, or fine sand at 166 ±15 μm as abrasives), in which enamel abrasion was quantified as height loss by before-and-after profilometry. The difference in enamel hardness between the species was highly significant, with nutria enamel achieving 78% of the hardness of cattle enamel. In the control and the fine sand group, no enamel height loss was evident, which was attributed to the in vitro system in the latter group, where the sand particles were brushed out of the test slurry by the brushes' bristles. For fine silt and volcanic ash, nutria enamel significantly lost 3.65 and 3.52 times more height than cattle. These results suggest a relationship between enamel hardness and susceptibility to abrasion. However, neither the pattern within the species nor across the species indicated a monotonous relationship between hardness and height loss; rather, the difference was due to qualitative step related to species. Hence, additional factors not measured in this study must be responsible for the differences in the enamel's susceptibility to abrasion. While the in vitro brush system cannot be used to rank abrasive test substances in terms of their abrasiveness, it can differentiate abrasion susceptibility in dental tissue of different animal species. The results caution against considering enamel wear as a similar process across mammals.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35298510 PMCID: PMC8929658 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0265237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Schematic representation of potential results of this study depending on different combinations of whether species differ in enamel hardness (columns), and whether different abrasives lead to different tissue loss irrespective of, or in proportion to, hardness.
Mean ± standard deviation (range) Knoop indentation hardness of incisor enamel of nutria (Myocastor coypus) and cattle (Bos primigenius taurus).
| Species | Jaw | n | Enamel hardness (kgf/mm2) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nutria | maxilla | 60 | 230 ±30 |
| mandible | 60 | 224 ±30 | |
| combined | 120 | 224 ±30 | |
| Cattle | mandible | 120 | 291 ±22 |
ameans not significantly different by Student t-test (P = 0.275).
ABmeans significantly different by Weltch t-test (P < 0.001).
Mean ± standard deviation (range) height loss incisor enamel of nutria (Myocastor coypus) and cattle (Bos primigenius taurus) in a standardized brush test with different treatments (n = 24 per treatment and species, except nutria fine silt n = 23).
| Species | Height loss (μm) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| control | fine sand | volcanic ash | fine silt | |
| Nutria | 0.01 ± 0.01 (0.00–0.04) | 0.03 ± 0.05 (0.00–0.19) | 10.27 ± 3.88 (4.44–22.53) | 26.87 ± 13.47 (11.05–66.88) |
| Cattle | 0.02 ± 0.02 (0.00–0.05) | 0.02 ± 0.02 (0.00–0.07) | 2.92 ± 1.14 (0.98–5.00) | 7.35 ± 3.09 (2.21–13.83) |
Results of general linear models assessing the effects of species, abrasive and enamel hardness on enamel height loss after a standardized brush test.
| Groups | Intercept | Species | Abrasive | Hardness | 2-way interactions | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Volcanic ash & fine silt | 0.680 | 0.498 | 9.78 | <0.001 | 10.63 | <0.001 | 0.18 | 0.860 | n.s. |
| Control & fine sand | 5.42 | <0.001 | 3.86 | <0.001 | 1.70 | 0.093 | -3.76 | <0.001 | Species × Hardness |
*log-transformed data.
°ranked data.
Fig 2Relationship of enamel hardness and enamel height loss in cattle (Bos primigenius taurus, black data) and nutria (Myocastor coypus, grey data) in (a) samples exposed to fine silt or volcanic ash; (b) samples of the control group and samples exposed to fine sand. For statistics, see Table 3. Note the log-log-scale in (a) and the trendlines that are generally not significant but only added to emphasize the data pattern.