Abstract
AbstractWe have studied the premaxillary teeth in three armoured catfish, Corydoras aeneus, C. arcuatus and Hoplosternum littorale, by means of light and electron microscopy, in order to compare their development, fine structure and mode of attachment with that of odontodes and other teleost teeth. A premaxillary dentition consisting of small (50–100 μm long) slender pointed teeth showing no true replacement is only present in larval and juvenile stages and is subsequently lost, possibly in relation to a change in feeding mode from predatory to bottom feeder. Like odontodes, teeth are composed of dentine surrounding a pulp cavity and are covered by a hypermineralized cap. Particular features, also found in odontodes, are the absence of dentinal tubules and of nerves and capillaries in the pulp cavity, both possibly related to the small size of the teeth. The irregular pattern of implantation and the variability in attachment mode (primary and/or secondary attachment bone, fusion, mere apposition or ligamentous connection) distinguish the teeth from most other teleost teeth and from odontodes and are interpreted as reflecting considerable differences in dynamics of remodeling of the supporting element (premaxillary bone vs scute). This comparison of teeth and odontodes strongly supports current views according to which teeth and odontodes are two very closely related phenotypic expressions of a single, modifiable, morphogenetic system probably rooted in the earliest stages of vertebrate evolution.
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