How did teeth evolve? - Peter S. Ungar

756,786 views ・ 2018-02-05

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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You may take them for granted, but your teeth are a marvel.
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They break up all your food over the course of your life,
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while being strong enough to withstand breakage themselves.
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And they’re formed using only the raw materials
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from the food they grind down in the first place.
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What’s behind their impressive strength?
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Teeth rely on an ingenious structure that makes them both hard and tough.
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Hardness can be thought of as the ability to resist a crack from starting,
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while toughness is what stops the crack from spreading
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Very few materials have both properties.
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For instance, glass is hard but not tough,
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while leather is tough but not hard.
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Teeth manage both by having two layers:
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a hard external cap of enamel, made up almost entirely of a calcium phosphate,
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and beneath it, a tougher layer of dentin,
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partly formed from organic fibers that make it flexible.
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This amazing structure is created by two types of cells:
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ameloblasts that secrete enamel
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and odontoblasts that secrete dentin.
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As they form teeth, odontoblasts move inward,
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while ameloblasts move out and slough off when they hit the surface.
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For enamel, this process produces long, thin strands,
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each about 60 nanometers in diameter.
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That’s one one-thousandth the width of a human hair.
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Those are bundled into rods, packed together,
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tens of thousands per square millimeter,
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to form the shield-like enamel layer.
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Once this process is finished, your enamel can’t repair itself again
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because all the cells that make it are lost,
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so we’re lucky that enamel can’t be easily destroyed.
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Odontoblasts use a more complex process, but unlike ameloblasts, they stick around,
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continuing to secrete dentin throughout your life.
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Despite the differences in teeth across the mammalian order,
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the underlying process of tooth growth is the same whether it’s for lions,
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kangaroos,
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elephants,
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or us.
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What changes is how nature sculpts the shape of the tooth,
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altering the folding and growth patterns
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to suit the distinct diets of different species.
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Cows have flat molar teeth with parallel ridges for grinding tough grasses.
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Cats have sharp crested molars, like blades, for shearing meat and sinew.
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Pigs have blunt, thick ones, useful for crushing hard roots and seeds.
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The myriad molars of modern mammals
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can be traced back to a common form called “tribosphenic,"
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which first appeared during the dinosaur age.
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In the 19th Century, paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope
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developed the basic model for how this form evolved.
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He hypothesized that it started with a cone-like tooth,
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as we see in many fishes, amphibians, and reptiles.
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Small cusps were then added, so the tooth had three in a row,
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aligned front to back, and connected by crests.
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Over time, the cusps were pushed out of line to make triangular crowns.
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Adjacent teeth formed a continuous zigzag of crests for slicing and dicing.
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A low shelf then formed at the back of each set of teeth,
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which became a platform for crushing.
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As Cope realized, the tribosphenic molar served as the jumping-off point
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for the radiation of specialized forms to follow,
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each shaped by evolutionary needs.
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Straighten the crests and remove the shelf,
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and you’ve got the conveniently bladed teeth of cats and dogs.
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Remove the front cusp, raise the shelf, and you’ve got our human molars.
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A few additional tweaks get you a horse or cow tooth.
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Some details in Cope’s intuitive hypothesis proved wrong.
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But in the fossil record,
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there are examples of teeth that look just as he predicted
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and we can trace the molars of all living mammals back to that primitive form.
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Today, the ability to consume diverse forms of food
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enables mammals to survive in habitats
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ranging from mountain peaks and ocean depths
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to rainforests and deserts.
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So the success of our biological class is due in no small measure
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to the remarkable strength and adaptability
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of the humble mammalian molar.
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