On the Maxillofacial Development of Mice, Mus musculus

Author:

Higashiyama Hiroki12ORCID,Kuroda Shunya3,Iwase Akiyasu24,Irie Naoki1,Kurihara Hiroki245

Affiliation:

1. Research Center for Integrative Evolutionary Science (RCIES), The Graduate University for Advanced Studies, SOKENDAI Hayama Kanagawa Japan

2. Department of Physiological Chemistry and Metabolism Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Tokyo Tokyo Bunkyo‐ku Japan

3. Institute for Frontier Science Initiative Kanazawa University, Kakuma‐machi Kanazawa Ishikawa Japan

4. Isotope Science Center, The University of Tokyo Tokyo Bunkyo‐ku Japan

5. International Research Center for Medical Sciences (IRCMS) Kumamoto University Kumamoto Chuo‐ku Japan

Abstract

ABSTRACTThe maxillofacial region is one of the most complex areas in the vertebrate body plan. The homology of the upper jaw bones remain controversial, both between mammals and nonmammalian amniotes and among humans and other mammals, leading to various hypotheses on how this region evolved from ancestral amniotes to humans. As a key mammalian model, the mouse (Mus musculus) is vital for unraveling the evolution and development of the maxillofacial region experimentally. However, limited detailed morphological descriptions of murine cranial development hinder the extrapolation of findings to other species, including humans. Here, we describe the development of the murine face, including the nerves, skeletons, and vasculatures from the pharyngula (9.0 days post‐coitum [dpc]) to the late fetal period (18.5 dpc) based on three‐dimensional reconstructions of histological sections. The present results confirm that the morphology of the pharyngula stages and developmental process of chondrocranium of mice is highly conserved when compared to nonmammalian tetrapods and humans. We also propose that the Os incisivum, the rostralmost bone in the mammalian upper jaw, consists of septomaxillary and palatine components, supporting our previous hypothesis that the ancestral premaxilla was entirely lost in mammals. The present descriptive study of mice strengthen the anatomical correspondence between mouse and human faces and offers a solid framework for comparative craniofacial studies across vertebrates.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

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