Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Early Palaeozoic dentine and patterned scales in the embryonic catshark tail

2007; Royal Society; Volume: 4; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1098/rsbl.2007.0502

ISSN

1744-957X

Autores

Zerina Johanson, Mikiko Tanaka, Natalie Chaplin, Moya Meredith Smith,

Tópico(s)

Bone Tumor Diagnosis and Treatments

Resumo

Regular scale patterning, restricted to the caudalmost tail and organized into two opposing rows on each side of the tail, is observed in few chondrichthyans. These evenly spaced scales, in dorsal and ventral rows, develop in an iterative sequence from the caudal tip, either side of the notochord. They are subsequently lost as a scattered pattern of placoid scales develops on the body and fins. An identical organized pattern is observed in tail scales of Scyliorhinus canicula (catshark), where the expression of sonic hedgehog signal is restricted to the epithelium of developing scales and remains localized to the scale pocket. Regulation of iterative scale position by sonic hedgehog is deeply conserved in vertebrate phylogeny. These scales also reveal an archaic histological structure of a dentine type found in the oldest known shark scales from the Ordovician and Silurian. This combination of regulated pattern and ancient dentine occurs only in the tail, representing the primary scalation. Scattered body scales in elasmobranchs such as S. canicula originate secondarily from differently regulated development, one with typical orthodentine around a central pulp cavity. These observations emphasize the modular nature of chondrichthyan scale development and illustrate previously undetected variation as an atavism in extant chondrichthyan dentine.

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