The dentition of osteichthyans presents an astonishing diversity with regard to the distribution of teeth in the oral cavity, tooth numbers, arrangements, shapes, and sizes. Taking examples from three unrelated teleosts—the most speciose group of osteichthyans—and from the literature, this study explores how the initial tooth pattern is set up, and how this relates to the establishment and maintenance (or modification) of the tooth replacement pattern. In teleosts, first-generation teeth (the very first teeth in ontogeny to develop at a particular locus) are commonly initiated in adjacent or in alternate (odd and even) positions. The mechanisms responsible for these divergent developmental patterns remain to be elucidated, in particular,...
Tooth replacement rates of polyphyodont cartilaginous and bony fishes are hard to determine because ...
A defining feature of dentitions in modern sharks and rays is the regulated pattern order that gener...
According to the classical theory, teeth derive from odontodes that invaded the oral cavity in conju...
The dentition of osteichthyans presents an astonishing diversity with regard to the distribution of ...
Mechanisms of tooth replacement distribute incongruently among extant gnathostomes (jawed vertebrate...
The mode of tooth development displayed in Chondrichthyans (sharks, rays and holocephalans), one of ...
Teleost dentitions, often polyphyodont and lacking occlusion, provide the potential for tooth form t...
The numerous cushion-shaped tooth-bearing plates attributed to the stem-group osteichthyan Lophosteu...
AbstractIn many non-mammalian vertebrates, adult dentitions result from cyclical rounds of tooth reg...
Dentition is a key vertebrate innovation showing not only great morphological diversity, but also di...
In this thesis we wished to test the hypothesis that stem cells are involved in the process of conti...
Most actinopterygians replace their teeth continuously throughout life. Major differences are nevert...
Teeth continue to be in the focus in many paleontological and neontological disciplines, and their m...
Ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) are the dominant vertebrate group today (+30 000 species, predomi...
To gain an insight into the evolution of tooth replacement mechanisms, we studied the development of...
Tooth replacement rates of polyphyodont cartilaginous and bony fishes are hard to determine because ...
A defining feature of dentitions in modern sharks and rays is the regulated pattern order that gener...
According to the classical theory, teeth derive from odontodes that invaded the oral cavity in conju...
The dentition of osteichthyans presents an astonishing diversity with regard to the distribution of ...
Mechanisms of tooth replacement distribute incongruently among extant gnathostomes (jawed vertebrate...
The mode of tooth development displayed in Chondrichthyans (sharks, rays and holocephalans), one of ...
Teleost dentitions, often polyphyodont and lacking occlusion, provide the potential for tooth form t...
The numerous cushion-shaped tooth-bearing plates attributed to the stem-group osteichthyan Lophosteu...
AbstractIn many non-mammalian vertebrates, adult dentitions result from cyclical rounds of tooth reg...
Dentition is a key vertebrate innovation showing not only great morphological diversity, but also di...
In this thesis we wished to test the hypothesis that stem cells are involved in the process of conti...
Most actinopterygians replace their teeth continuously throughout life. Major differences are nevert...
Teeth continue to be in the focus in many paleontological and neontological disciplines, and their m...
Ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) are the dominant vertebrate group today (+30 000 species, predomi...
To gain an insight into the evolution of tooth replacement mechanisms, we studied the development of...
Tooth replacement rates of polyphyodont cartilaginous and bony fishes are hard to determine because ...
A defining feature of dentitions in modern sharks and rays is the regulated pattern order that gener...
According to the classical theory, teeth derive from odontodes that invaded the oral cavity in conju...