Within vertebrates, teleost fishes provide a rich evolutionary context for studying the mechanisms of dental divergence because of the numerous axes along which their teeth have diverged phenotypically and presumably developmentally. Using both a review of teleost in situ hybridization and de novo transcriptome sequencing in a cichlid fish, we examined whether 341 gene homologs thought to play a role in developing mice teeth are expressed in the tooth-bearing jaws of teleosts. The similarities and putative differences in gene expression documented between the two most commonly used models, zebrafish and cichlids, highlight what can be learned from using a greater diversity of teleost model systems in studies of tooth development. Both types...
Sharks and rays (elasmobranchs) regenerate their teeth via a novel system in which multiple teeth de...
A dynamic model for odontogenesis is lacking. Cichlids serve as superior organisms for studies in t...
Science and medicine have progressed in unfathomable ways over the past century. Paradoxically, as o...
Within vertebrates, teleost fishes provide a rich evolutionary context for studying the mechanisms o...
The two toothed jaws of cichlid fishes provide textbook examples of convergent evolution. Tooth phen...
Vertebrate dentitions originated in the posterior pharynx of jawless fishes more than half a billion...
Vertebrate dentitions originated in the posterior pharynx of jawless fishes more than half a billion...
An abundance of morphological diversity is seen across nature yet we know little of the mechanistic ...
© 2009 Fraser et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Comm...
Background The oral and pharyngeal jaw of cichlid fishes are a classic example of evolutionary modul...
How gene expression diverges during adaptation might be strongly influenced by the geographic settin...
The study of odontogenesis has been limited by the lack of established developmental models which re...
A major goal in evolutionary biology is to understand the molecular basis of phenotypic divergence d...
Teleost dentitions, often polyphyodont and lacking occlusion, provide the potential for tooth form t...
Teeth are a classic model for studying vertebrate organogenesis and evolution. Despite the incredibl...
Sharks and rays (elasmobranchs) regenerate their teeth via a novel system in which multiple teeth de...
A dynamic model for odontogenesis is lacking. Cichlids serve as superior organisms for studies in t...
Science and medicine have progressed in unfathomable ways over the past century. Paradoxically, as o...
Within vertebrates, teleost fishes provide a rich evolutionary context for studying the mechanisms o...
The two toothed jaws of cichlid fishes provide textbook examples of convergent evolution. Tooth phen...
Vertebrate dentitions originated in the posterior pharynx of jawless fishes more than half a billion...
Vertebrate dentitions originated in the posterior pharynx of jawless fishes more than half a billion...
An abundance of morphological diversity is seen across nature yet we know little of the mechanistic ...
© 2009 Fraser et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Comm...
Background The oral and pharyngeal jaw of cichlid fishes are a classic example of evolutionary modul...
How gene expression diverges during adaptation might be strongly influenced by the geographic settin...
The study of odontogenesis has been limited by the lack of established developmental models which re...
A major goal in evolutionary biology is to understand the molecular basis of phenotypic divergence d...
Teleost dentitions, often polyphyodont and lacking occlusion, provide the potential for tooth form t...
Teeth are a classic model for studying vertebrate organogenesis and evolution. Despite the incredibl...
Sharks and rays (elasmobranchs) regenerate their teeth via a novel system in which multiple teeth de...
A dynamic model for odontogenesis is lacking. Cichlids serve as superior organisms for studies in t...
Science and medicine have progressed in unfathomable ways over the past century. Paradoxically, as o...