3.8 Article

Integrating genealogy and dental variation: contributions to biological anthropology

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL ANTHROPOLOGY
卷 181, 期 -, 页码 145-179

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ajpa.24662

关键词

dental anthropology; dental phenomics; genealogy; quantitative genetics; twin testosterone transfer (TTT)

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Genealogical samples that combine dental data and relatedness information are valuable for studying the biological basis of tooth variation. These samples allow for testing long-standing assumptions in bioanthropology and provide practical implications for quantitative genetic and environmental studies. Additionally, they can be used to investigate the influence of non-genetic factors on dental characters. Genealogical samples are likely to play a crucial role in generating comprehensive genotype-phenotype maps of the dentition and refining bioanthropological methods.
Genealogical samples that couple dental data and documented relatedness information provide unique opportunities to examine the biological foundations of tooth variation. Over the past century, these resources have been critical for examining the various factors that influence dental phenotypes-the same traits that anthropologists regularly apply to reconstructions of past phenomena. Genealogical samples are uniquely suited to test long-standing assumptions underlying bioanthropological practice, for example, biodistance and phylogenetic analysis, which commonly reference aspects of tooth size and form as proxies for latent genetic information. This article provides an overview of published genealogical research, with a focus on the practical implications of quantitative genetic and environmental studies of (non)human primate dentitions. To highlight the utility of genealogical samples for understanding the influence of specific non-genetic factors on dental characters, we also present novel data on gestational hormone effects in opposite-sex dizygotic twin pairs as a test of the twin testosterone transfer (TTT) hypothesis. This article discusses fruitful next steps in genealogical dental research, as well as important ethical considerations surrounding the use of associated datasets, which are sensitive in nature. As we forge ahead in an age of phenomics, genealogical samples are likely to play a key role in generating comprehensive genotype-phenotype maps of the dentition and in refining bioanthropological methods.

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