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Osteoderms in a mammal the spiny mouse Acomys and the independent evolution of dermal armor

Malcolm Maden, Trey Polvadore, Arod Polanco, W. Brad Barbazuk, Edward L. Stanley

2023iScience15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Osteoderms are bony plates found in the skin of vertebrates, mostly commonly in reptiles where they have evolved independently multiple times, suggesting the presence of a gene regulatory network that is readily activated and inactivated. They are absent in birds and mammals except for the armadillo. However, we have discovered that in one subfamily of rodents, the Deomyinae, there are osteoderms in the skin of their tails. Osteoderm development begins in the proximal tail skin and is complete 6 weeks after birth. RNA sequencing has identified the gene networks involved in their differentiation. There is a widespread down-regulation of keratin genes and an up-regulation of osteoblast genes and a finely balanced expression of signaling pathways as the osteoderms differentiate. Future comparisons with reptilian osteoderms may allow us to understand how these structures have evolved and why they are so rare in mammals.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyMammalSubfamilyGeneEvolutionary biologyAnatomyZoologyGeneticsDevelopmental Biology and Gene RegulationSkin and Cellular Biology ResearchWnt/β-catenin signaling in development and cancer
Osteoderms in a mammal the spiny mouse Acomys and the independent evolution of dermal armor | Litcius