Studies on dentin. 2. Vestigial lacteal incisor teeth of the rat. 1975

L Moss-Salentijn

The presence of a vestigial, lacteal incisor tooth is described in the laboratory rat. This tooth is felt to belong to the same dental generation as the other functional teeth. Accordingly, the rat is described as having a monophyodont, first dentition containing two incisor teeth in each quadrant. These vestigial teeth are then compared with other similar mammalian teeth and are defined as transient, partially formed and non-functional. As such, they are differentiated from other transient teeth. The examination of the fossil record suggests that tooth loss is a general phenomenon in rodents, but that this vestigial tooth probably represents a condition present in forms antecedent to rodents. A critical literature review strongly suggests that the teeth of the recent rat are members of the first dental generation. The presence of such a vestigial tooth and of the postincisive diastema in the rat is felt to be an example of phylogenetic reduction and progressive retardation in the sense of de Beer's concepts. These same two phenomena were analyzed with respect to the field theory of Butler and of the Zahnreihen theory of Edmund. Placed within the context of recent data on epithelioectomesenchymal interactions, both theories were supported, and both the vestigial teeth and anodontic diastema were shown to be explicable within these conceptual frameworks.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007180 Incisor Any of the eight frontal teeth (four maxillary and four mandibular) having a sharp incisal edge for cutting food and a single root, which occurs in man both as a deciduous and a permanent tooth. (Jablonski, Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992, p820) Incisors
D009804 Odontoblasts The mesenchymal cells which line the DENTAL PULP CAVITY and produce DENTIN. They have a columnar morphology in the coronal pulp but are cuboidal in the root pulp, or when adjacent to tertiary dentin. Odontoblast
D002454 Cell Differentiation Progressive restriction of the developmental potential and increasing specialization of function that leads to the formation of specialized cells, tissues, and organs. Differentiation, Cell,Cell Differentiations,Differentiations, Cell
D003804 Dentin The hard portion of the tooth surrounding the pulp, covered by enamel on the crown and cementum on the root, which is harder and denser than bone but softer than enamel, and is thus readily abraded when left unprotected. (From Jablonski, Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992) Dentine,Dentines,Dentins
D003810 Dentinogenesis The formation of dentin. Dentin first appears in the layer between the ameloblasts and odontoblasts and becomes calcified immediately. Formation progresses from the tip of the papilla over its slope to form a calcified cap becoming thicker by the apposition of new layers pulpward. A layer of uncalcified dentin intervenes between the calcified tissue and the odontoblast and its processes. (From Jablonski, Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992) Dentinogeneses
D000565 Ameloblasts Cylindrical epithelial cells in the innermost layer of the ENAMEL ORGAN. Their functions include contribution to the development of the dentinoenamel junction by the deposition of a layer of the matrix, thus producing the foundation for the prisms (the structural units of the DENTAL ENAMEL), and production of the matrix for the enamel prisms and interprismatic substance. (From Jablonski's Dictionary of Dentistry, 1992) Ameloblast
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia
D051381 Rats The common name for the genus Rattus. Rattus,Rats, Laboratory,Rats, Norway,Rattus norvegicus,Laboratory Rat,Laboratory Rats,Norway Rat,Norway Rats,Rat,Rat, Laboratory,Rat, Norway,norvegicus, Rattus

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