Montclair State Professor’s Research Concludes That Birds Lost Their Teeth More Than 100 Million Years Ago

Posted: Published on December 19th, 2014

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

Montclair, NJ (PRWEB) December 18, 2014

Robert Meredith, an assistant professor of biology and molecular biology at Montclair State University has long wondered whether teeth were lost in the common ancestor of all living birds, or whether they were lost convergently in several independent bird lineages. Meredith is a lead author of Evidence for Tooth Loss and the Acquisition of a Horny Beak in the Common Avian Ancestor, a report published in the December 12, 2014 issue of Science that concludes that the common ancestor of all living birds lost its teeth approximately 116 million years ago.

Toothless vertebrates including birds, turtles and a few groups of mammals, such as anteaters and baleen whales, have all descended from ancestors with enamel-capped teeth. Aardvarks, sloths and armadillos are mammals whose teeth lack enamel.

Modern birds, which evolved from toothed theropod dinosaurs such as Tyrannosaurus Rex, use a horny beak and a muscular gizzard instead of teeth to grind up and process their food.

"For the past several years, I have been involved in Avian Genome Working Group, an international collaboration of more than a hundred investigators and dozens of universities and museums, said Meredith. The group has been sequencing and analyzing the genomes of representatives of 48 major lineages of birds, including ostriches, chickens, ducks, raptors and songbirds.

While the fossil record of early birds is fragmentary, a research team led by Meredith and Mark Springer, a biology professor at the University of California, Riverside, has examined remnants of tooth genes in birds to determine that bird edentulism, or absence of teeth, stems from a common ancestor.

Tooth formation in vertebrates involves many different genes, with six genes deemed essential for the formation of dentin and enamel.

Our report presents a comparative genomic analysis of the six genes that are involved in tooth formation in representative toothed, toothless and enamelless vertebrates, Meredith explained. All genomes of toothless vertebrates have inactivating mutations in dentin and enamel-related genes that render them non-functional. All bird genomes share inactivating mutations in tooth-related genes, which provide the molecular evidence for our hypothesis that teeth were lost in the common ancestor of modern birds.

Merediths team findings that the 48 bird species share these inactivating mutations in the dentin and enamel-related genes suggest that tooth loss and beak development evolved together in the common ancestor of all modern birds.

Meredith and Springers team included scientists from the China National GeneBank; the University of Copenhagen Oster Voldgade, Denmark; and the Duke University Medical Center. The team, with the addition of several other scientists, contributed to Genome Evolution in Birds, a second paper published in the same issue of Science that seeks to discover what makes a bird a bird.

Originally posted here:
Montclair State Professor's Research Concludes That Birds Lost Their Teeth More Than 100 Million Years Ago

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