Increasing control over biomineralization in conodont evolution

Publication date

2024-06-20

Authors

Shirley, BryanISNI 0000000512606744
Leonhard, Isabella
Murdock, Duncan j. e.
Repetski, John
Świś, Przemysław
Bestmann, Michel
Trimby, Pat
Ohl, MarkusISNI 0000000492916947
Plümper, OliverISNI 000000048530204X
King, Helen E.ISNI 0000000355993460

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Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Vertebrates use the phosphate mineral apatite in their skeletons, which allowed them to develop tissues such as enamel, characterized by an outstanding combination of hardness and elasticity. It has been hypothesized that the evolution of the earliest vertebrate skeletal tissues, found in the teeth of the extinct group of conodonts, was driven by adaptation to dental function. We test this hypothesis quantitatively and demonstrate that the crystallographic order increased throughout the early evolution of conodont teeth in parallel with morphological adaptation to food processing. With the c-axes of apatite crystals oriented perpendicular to the functional feeding surfaces, the strongest resistance to uniaxial compressional stress is conferred along the long axes of denticles. Our results support increasing control over biomineralization in the first skeletonized vertebrates and allow us to test models of functional morphology and material properties across conodont dental diversity.

Keywords

General Chemistry, General Biochemistry,Genetics and Molecular Biology, General Physics and Astronomy

Citation

Shirley, B, Leonhard, I, Murdock, D J E, Repetski, J, Świś, P, Bestmann, M, Trimby, P, Ohl, M, Plümper, O, King, H E & Jarochowska, E 2024, 'Increasing control over biomineralization in conodont evolution', Nature Communications, vol. 15, no. 1, 5273. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49526-0