4.6 Article

Functional constraints channel mandible shape ontogenies in rodents

Journal

ROYAL SOCIETY OPEN SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rsos.220352

Keywords

geometric morphometrics; mandible shape; ontogeny; rodent

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Postnatal growth in mammals is crucial for acquiring adult shape. The mandible undergoes changes in response to functional constraints, leading to bone formation and remodelling to accommodate dietary and behavioural changes. Interactions between bone, muscles, and teeth drive developmental plasticity, resulting in convergences in ontogenies and adult shape variations.
In mammals, postnatal growth plays an essential role in the acquisition of the adult shape. During this period, the mandible undergoes many changing functional constraints, leading to spatialization of bone formation and remodelling to accommodate various dietary and behavioural changes. The interactions between the bone, muscles and teeth drive this developmental plasticity, which, in turn, could lead to convergences in the developmental processes constraining the directionality of ontogenies, their evolution and thus the adult shape variation. To test the importance of the interactions between tissues in shaping the ontogenetic trajectories, we compared the mandible shape at five postnatal stages on three rodents: the house mouse, the Mongolian gerbil and the golden hamster, using geometric morphometrics. After an early shape differentiation, by both longer gestation and allometric scaling in gerbils or early divergence of postnatal ontogeny in hamsters in comparison with the mouse, the ontogenetic trajectories appear more similar around weaning. The changes in muscle load associated with new food processing and new behaviours at weaning seem to impose similar physical constraints on the mandible, driving the convergences of the ontogeny at that stage despite an early anatomical differentiation. Nonetheless, mice present a rather different timing compared with gerbils or hamsters.

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