SteveGrenard
Philosopher
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While researching something else I don't know how I missed this from last February so here it is. The first evidence that chickens, at least a mutant type called talpid2, can grow teeth:
Original Reference from Med-Line. Living crocodilians (alligators and crocs) are archosaurs. More evidence that crocodilians are pretty closely related to birds than to other reptiles.....
http://dsc.discovery.com/news/briefs/20060220/chicken_ani.html
Mutant Chickens Grow Teeth
By Jennifer Viegas, Discovery News
Feb. 22, 2006 — Chickens born with a mutated gene associated with tooth development were coaxed by researchers into growing functioning teeth, according to a paper published in this week's Current Biology.
Researchers previously caused teeth to grow in birds by combining mouse tooth-forming tissue with bird jaw tissue, but this time the scientists merely enhanced a genetic trait that exists naturally in the mutant birds.
The unusual feat represents the first evidence for tooth development in birds without grafts or tissue manipulation.
Lead author Matthew Harris told Discovery News that the early theropod dinosaur ancestors of birds possessed impressive choppers.
Original Reference from Med-Line. Living crocodilians (alligators and crocs) are archosaurs. More evidence that crocodilians are pretty closely related to birds than to other reptiles.....
The development of archosaurian first-generation teeth in a chicken mutant.
* Harris MP,
* Hasso SM,
* Ferguson MW,
* Fallon JF.
Department of Anatomy, University of Wisconsin, 1300 University Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53706, USA. matthew.harris@tuebingen.mpg.de
Modern birds do not have teeth. Rather, they develop a specialized keratinized structure, called the rhamphotheca, that covers the mandible, maxillae, and premaxillae. Although recombination studies have shown that the avian epidermis can respond to tooth-inductive cues from mouse or lizard oral mesenchyme and participate in tooth formation, attempts to initiate tooth development de novo in birds have failed. Here, we describe the formation of teeth in the talpid2 chicken mutant, including the developmental processes and early molecular changes associated with the formation of teeth. Additionally, we show recapitulation of the early events seen in talpid2 after in vivo activation of beta-catenin in wild-type embryos. We compare the formation of teeth in the talpid2 mutant with that in the alligator and show the formation of decidedly archosaurian (crocodilian) first-generation teeth in an avian embryo. The formation of teeth in the mutant is coupled with alterations in the specification of the oral/aboral boundary of the jaw. We propose an epigenetic model of the developmental modification of dentition in avian evolution; in this model, changes in the relative position of a lateral signaling center over competent odontogenic mesenchyme led to loss of teeth in avians while maintaining tooth developmental potential.