The developmental basis for scaling of mammalian tooth size
0301 basic medicine
History
Teeth
shape
size
Scaling
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
Cognition
Size
Proboscidea Mammal
Animals
Body Size
Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease
IGF
Igf
Heritage and Archaeology
teeth
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Shrews
scaling
Shape
Biological Sciences
Molar
Rats
[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio]
Archaeology
Ecology, evolutionary biology
Geosciences
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.2300374120
Publication Date:
2023-06-12T19:19:12Z
AUTHORS (11)
ABSTRACT
When evolution leads to differences in body size, organs generally scale along. A well-known example of the tight relationship between organ and body size is the scaling of mammalian molar teeth. To investigate how teeth scale during development and evolution, we compared molar development from initiation through final size in the mouse and the rat. Whereas the linear dimensions of the rat molars are twice that of the mouse molars, their shapes are largely the same. Here, we focus on the first lower molars that are considered the most reliable dental proxy for size-related patterns due to their low within-species variability. We found that scaling of the molars starts early, and that the rat molar is patterned equally as fast but in a larger size than the mouse molar. Using transcriptomics, we discovered that a known regulator of body size, insulin-like growth factor 1 (
Igf1
), is more highly expressed in the rat molars compared to the mouse molars. Ex vivo and in vivo mouse models demonstrated that modulation of the IGF pathway reproduces several aspects of the observed scaling process. Furthermore, analysis of IGF1-treated mouse molars and computational modeling indicate that IGF signaling scales teeth by simultaneously enhancing growth and by inhibiting the cusp-patterning program, thereby providing a relatively simple mechanism for scaling teeth during development and evolution. Finally, comparative data from shrews to elephants suggest that this scaling mechanism regulates the minimum tooth size possible, as well as the patterning potential of large teeth.
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