Skull morphology and histology indicate the presence of an unexpected buccal soft tissue structure in dinosaurs.

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 ANATOMY & MORPHOLOGY
Henry S Sharpe, Yan-Yin Wang, Thomas W Dudgeon, Mark J Powers, S Amber Whitebone, Colton C Coppock, Aaron D Dyer, Corwin Sullivan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Unlike mammals, reptiles typically lack large muscles and ligaments that connect the zygoma to the mandible. Dinosaur craniomandibular soft tissue reconstructions, often based on the rationale of extant phylogenetic bracketing, follow this general rule. However, descending flanges from the zygomata of hadrosaurs, heterodontosaurids, and psittacosaurids have been used to argue for a masseter-like muscle in these dinosaur taxa. We examined dinosauriform skulls for osteological indicators of connective tissue entheses on the zygoma and mandible, and subsequently sectioned 10 specimens for histological evidence. Osteological indicators were found on the zygoma in most sampled dinosauriforms, which range from rugosities to large descending processes, and morphologically resemble known muscular and ligamentous entheses. Similarly, rugose features oriented towards the zygoma were found on the mandible in sampled dinosauriforms, many having previously been interpreted as entheses for the adductor mandibulae muscle group. Serial histological sectioning of ceratopsid, hadrosaurid, and tyrannosaurid jugal and surangular rugosities reveals an external cortex rich in collagen fibres, strongly resembling entheseal fibres. Jugal entheseal fibres are usually oriented ventrally towards the surangular, and in hadrosaurids and tyrannosaurids these are parallel to macroscopic striations on the surfaces of the jugal flange. Histological sections of extant chicken buccal regions show similar entheseal fibres in the attachments of the jugomandibular ligament on the jugal and of the adductor musculature on the mandible. We hypothesise a strong connective tissue structure bridging the zygoma and mandible in dinosaurs, termed the 'exoparia'. This structure's size and proximity to the craniomandibular joint would be advantageous in stabilising the mandible relative to the cranium during jaw movement, particularly in dinosaurs thought to process their masticate. A ligamentous or muscular identity for the exoparia cannot be determined with the available data, but the size and shape of the zygomatic entheses in many dinosaurs are more consistent with a muscular attachment. Possible antecedents in non-dinosauriform archosaurs and derivations in modern birds may exist, but the homology of the exoparia is currently unknown. These results highlight the complex soft tissue evolution of dinosaurs and caution against simplified phylogenetic model-based approaches to tissue reconstruction that ignore contrasting osteological signals.

颅骨形态学和组织学表明,在恐龙中存在一种意想不到的口腔软组织结构。
与哺乳动物不同,爬行动物通常缺乏连接颧骨和下颌骨的大肌肉和韧带。恐龙颅下颚软组织重建,通常基于现存的系统发育的基本原理,遵循这一一般规则。然而,来自鸭嘴龙、异齿龙和鹦鹉嘴龙颧骨的下缘被用来证明这些恐龙类群中有类似咬人肌的肌肉。我们检查了恐龙头骨在颧骨和下颌骨上结缔组织嵌套的骨学指标,并随后对10个标本进行了切片以获得组织学证据。在大多数恐龙标本中,在颧骨上发现了骨学指标,其范围从皱襞到大的下降突,形态学上类似于已知的肌肉和韧带内窝。同样,在样本恐龙的下颌骨上也发现了朝向颧骨的皱褶特征,许多以前被解释为下颌内收肌群的括约肌。角鼻龙、鸭嘴龙和暴龙的角状和角状皱褶的连续组织学切片显示,外皮层富含胶原纤维,与尾鞘纤维非常相似。颈缘内眦纤维通常朝向腹侧的棱角,在鸭嘴龙和暴龙中,这些纤维平行于颈缘表面的宏观条纹。现存鸡颊区的组织学切片显示,在颧下颌韧带的附着物和下颌骨的内收肌的附着物中有类似的内隐纤维。我们假设在恐龙的颧骨和下颌骨之间有一个强大的结缔组织结构,称为“外腭”。这种结构的大小和靠近颅下颌关节的位置,对于在下颌运动时稳定下颌骨相对于头盖骨是有利的,特别是对于那些被认为是处理咀嚼的恐龙来说。根据现有的资料,我们还不能确定外腭是韧带还是肌肉,但许多恐龙的颧骨的大小和形状更符合肌肉附着物。在非恐龙始祖和现代鸟类中可能存在其祖先,但目前尚不清楚其同源性。这些结果强调了恐龙复杂的软组织进化,并警告人们不要采用基于简化系统发育模型的方法来进行组织重建,这些方法忽略了对比的骨学信号。
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来源期刊
Journal of Anatomy
Journal of Anatomy 医学-解剖学与形态学
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
8.30%
发文量
183
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Anatomy is an international peer-reviewed journal sponsored by the Anatomical Society. The journal publishes original papers, invited review articles and book reviews. Its main focus is to understand anatomy through an analysis of structure, function, development and evolution. Priority will be given to studies of that clearly articulate their relevance to the anatomical community. Focal areas include: experimental studies, contributions based on molecular and cell biology and on the application of modern imaging techniques and papers with novel methods or synthetic perspective on an anatomical system. Studies that are essentially descriptive anatomy are appropriate only if they communicate clearly a broader functional or evolutionary significance. You must clearly state the broader implications of your work in the abstract. We particularly welcome submissions in the following areas: Cell biology and tissue architecture Comparative functional morphology Developmental biology Evolutionary developmental biology Evolutionary morphology Functional human anatomy Integrative vertebrate paleontology Methodological innovations in anatomical research Musculoskeletal system Neuroanatomy and neurodegeneration Significant advances in anatomical education.
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