Genetic Correlations Among Dental, Mandibular, and Postcranial Dimensions in Rhesus Macaques (Macaca mulatta).

IF 1.7 2区 生物学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY American Journal of Biological Anthropology Pub Date : 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1002/ajpa.25059
Anna M Hardin
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Abstract

Objectives: Tooth dimensions typically scale with mandibular and postcranial size in primates, although the exact pattern of scaling varies. This study assesses whether correlations by tissue type, anatomical region, or function (mastication or intrasexual competition) are present and could therefore act as evolutionary constraints on tooth-jaw-body size relationships by estimating genetic and phenotypic correlations between dental, mandibular, and postcranial dimensions in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta).

Materials and methods: The teeth, mandibles, and postcrania of 362 adults from the Cayo Santiago skeletal collection were measured. Humeral and femoral articular surfaces were selected to represent skeletal elements frequently used to reconstruct primate body size. Genetic correlations were estimated in SOLAR. Random skewers analyses were used to compare genetic and phenotypic correlation matrices to each other and to test matrices.

Results: The genetic correlation matrix was most similar to the test matrix of integration by tissue type (tooth and bone) (r = 0.765, p < 0.001), and nearly as similar to the anatomical region test matrix (r = 0.714, p < 0.001). Hierarchical clustering of the genetic correlation matrix showed similar separation by tissue type. Phenotypic correlation matrices were significantly similar to the genetic correlation matrix (r = 0.813-0.846, p < 0.001) and to most of the test matrices.

Conclusions: Postcanine dental traits were highly heritable but were not closely genetically correlated with mandibular or postcranial dimensions. These findings indicate that scaling relationships between tooth and bone may be maintained in some populations through nongenetic, environmental factors rather than genetic constraints.

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恒河猴(Macaca mulatta)牙齿、下颌和颅后尺寸的遗传相关性。
目的:在灵长类动物中,牙齿尺寸通常与下颌和颅后尺寸成比例,尽管准确的比例模式各不相同。本研究通过评估恒河猴(Macaca mulatta)牙齿、下颌和颅后尺寸之间的遗传和表型相关性,评估组织类型、解剖区域或功能(咀嚼或性内竞争)是否存在相关性,并因此可能作为牙齿-下颌-身体尺寸关系的进化约束。材料和方法:测量了圣地亚哥岛362名成年人的牙齿、下颌骨和后颅骨。肱骨和股骨关节面被选择来代表经常用于重建灵长类动物体型的骨骼元素。在SOLAR中估计遗传相关性。随机串分析用于比较遗传和表型相关矩阵彼此和测试矩阵。结果:遗传相关矩阵与组织类型(牙和骨)整合的测试矩阵最相似(r = 0.765, p)。结论:犬牙后性状具有高度遗传性,但与下颌或颅后尺寸的遗传相关性不密切。这些发现表明,在一些人群中,牙齿和骨骼之间的缩放关系可能是通过非遗传的环境因素而不是遗传限制来维持的。
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