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Bone microstructure and bone mineral density are not systemically different in Antarctic icefishes and related Antarctic notothenioids

Authors :
Oghenevwogaga J. Atake
Thomas Desvignes
Katie Ovens
David M. L. Cooper
Isaac V. Pratt
Amir M. Ashique
B. Frank Eames
Ruiyi Guo
John H. Postlethwait
H. William Detrich
Source :
Journal of Anatomy
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Ancestors of the Antarctic icefishes (family Channichthyidae) were benthic and had no swim bladder, making it energetically expensive to rise from the ocean floor. To exploit the water column, benthopelagic icefishes were hypothesized to have evolved a skeleton with “reduced bone,” which gross anatomical data supported. Here, we tested the hypothesis that changes to icefish bones also occurred below the level of gross anatomy. Histology and micro‐CT imaging of representative craniofacial bones (i.e., ceratohyal, frontal, dentary, and articular) of extant Antarctic fish species specifically evaluated two features that might cause the appearance of “reduced bone”: bone microstructure (e.g., bone volume fraction and structure linear density) and bone mineral density (BMD, or mass of mineral per volume of bone). Measures of bone microstructure were not consistently different in bones from the icefishes Chaenocephalus aceratus and Champsocephalus gunnari, compared to the related benthic notothenioids Notothenia coriiceps and Gobionotothen gibberifrons. Some quantitative measures, such as bone volume fraction and structure linear density, were significantly increased in some icefish bones compared to homologous bones of non‐icefish. However, such differences were rare, and no microstructural measures were consistently different in icefishes across all bones and species analyzed. Furthermore, BMD was similar among homologous bones of icefish and non‐icefish Antarctic notothenioids. In summary, “reduced bone” in icefishes was not due to systemic changes in bone microstructure or BMD, raising the prospect that “reduced bone” in icefish occurs only at the gross anatomic level (i.e., smaller or fewer bones). Given that icefishes exhibit delayed skeletal development compared to non‐icefish Antarctic fishes, combining these phenotypic data with genomic data might clarify genetic changes driving skeletal heterochrony.<br />Antarctic icefishes are amazing examples of evolutionary adaptation. Here, we show quantitatively that icefish skeletons did not change bone microstructure or bone mineral density, relative to closely related fish species.

Details

ISSN :
14697580
Volume :
240
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of anatomy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....25db1886ce8a75c5b97f89c572b10725