AI Article Synopsis

  • The echidna incubates its eggs in a pouch for 10 days, during which fetuses develop an egg tooth and caruncle to help with hatching.
  • Research using advanced imaging and tissue analysis showed that the echidna's egg tooth forms differently from placental mammals, resembling developmental processes seen in some reptiles and fish.
  • The findings suggest that the echidna's egg tooth has evolutionary ties to reptilian teeth, indicating that certain traits have been preserved from a shared ancestor of mammals and reptiles.

Article Abstract

In the echidna, after development in utero, the egg is laid in the pouch and incubated for 10 days. During this time, the fetuses develop an egg tooth and caruncle to help them hatch. Using rare and unprecedented access to limited echidna pre- and post-hatching tissues, development of the egg tooth and caruncle were assessed by micro-CT, histology and immunofluorescence. Unlike therian tooth germs that develop by placode invagination, the echidna egg tooth developed by evagination, similar to the first teeth in some reptiles and fish. The egg tooth ankylosed to the premaxilla, rather than forming a tooth root with ligamentous attachment found in other mammals, with loss of the egg tooth associated with high levels of activity odontoclasts and apoptosis. The caruncle formed as a separate mineralisation from the adjacent nasal capsule, and as observed in birds and turtles, the nasal region epithelium on top of the nose expressed markers of cornification. Together, this highlights that the monotreme egg tooth shares many similarities with typical reptilian teeth, suggesting that this tooth has been conserved from a common ancestor of mammals and reptiles.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2022.12.005DOI Listing

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