Dermal denticles on the tail of the Little Skate, as used in the latest research.

Latest findings support the theory that teeth in the animal kingdom evolved from the jagged scales of ancient fish, the remnants of which can be seen today embedded in the skin of sharks and skate.听

This ancient dermal skeleton has undergone considerable reductions and modifications through time

Andrew Gillis

In biology, one long-running debate has teeth: whether ancient fish scales moved into the mouth with the origin of jaws, or if the tooth had its own evolutionary inception.

Recent studies on species such as zebrafish showed scales and teeth developing from distinctly different clusters of cells in fish embryos, pouring cold water on 鈥榯eeth from scales鈥 theories.

However, while most fish in the sea have bones, one ancient lineage 鈥 sharks, skates and rays 鈥 possess skeletons made entirely of cartilage.

These cartilaginous fish retain some primitive characteristics that have been lost in their bony counterparts, including small spiky scales embedded in their skin called 鈥榙ermal denticles鈥 that bear a striking resemblance to jagged teeth. 听

Now, researchers at the 探花直播 of Cambridge have used fluorescent markers to track cell development in the embryo of a cartilaginous fish 鈥 a little skate in this case 鈥 and found that these thorny scales are in fact created from the same type of cells as teeth: neural crest cells.

探花直播findings, , support the theory that, in the depths of early evolution, these 鈥榙enticle鈥 scales were carried into the emerging mouths of jawed vertebrates to form teeth. Jawed vertebrates now make up 99% of all living vertebrates, from fish to mammals.

鈥 探花直播scales of most fish that live today are very different from the ancient scales of early vertebrates,鈥 says study author Dr Andrew Gillis from Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Zoology and the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole.

鈥淧rimitive scales were much more tooth-like in structure, but have been retained in only a few living lineages, including that of cartilaginous fishes such as skates and sharks.

鈥淪troke a shark and you鈥檒l find it feels rougher than other fish, as shark skin is covered entirely in dermal denticles. There鈥檚 evidence that shark skin was actually used as sandpaper as early as the Bronze Age,鈥 says Gillis.

鈥淏y labelling the different types of cells in the embryos of skate, we were able to trace their fates. We show that, unlike most fish, the denticle scales of sharks and skate develop from neural crest cells, just like teeth.

鈥淣eural crest cells are central to the process of tooth development in mammals. Our findings suggest a deep evolutionary relationship between these primitive fish scales and the teeth of vertebrates.

鈥淓arly jawless vertebrates were filter feeders 鈥 sucking in small prey items from the water. It was the advent of both jaws and teeth that allowed vertebrates to begin processing larger and more complex prey.鈥

探花直播very name of these scales, dermal denticles, alludes to the fact that they are formed of dentine: a hard calcified tissue that makes up the majority of a tooth, sitting underneath the enamel.听听

探花直播jagged dermal denticles on sharks and skate 鈥 and, quite possibly, vertebrate teeth 鈥 are remnants of the earliest mineralised skeleton of vertebrates: superficial armour plating.听

This armour would have perhaps peaked some 400 million years ago in now-extinct jawless vertebrate species, as protection against predation by ferocious sea scorpions, or even their early jawed kin.听

探花直播Cambridge scientists hypothesise that these early armour plates were multi-layered: consisting of a foundation of bone and an outer layer of dentine 鈥 with the different layers deriving from different types of cells in unborn embryos.

These layers were then variously retained, reduced or lost in different vertebrate linages over the course of evolution. 鈥淭his ancient dermal skeleton has undergone considerable reductions and modifications through time,鈥 says Gillis.

鈥 探花直播sharks and skate have lost the bony under-layer, while most fish have lost the tooth-like dentine outer layer. A few species, such as the bichir, a popular fish in home aquariums, have retained aspects of both layers of this ancient external skeleton.鈥



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