Data for: Three-dimensional characterization of osteocyte volumes at multiple scales, and its relationship with bone biology and genome evolution in ray-finned fishes
Osteocytes, cells embedded within the bone mineral matrix, inform on key aspects of vertebrate biology. In particular, a relationship between volumes of the osteocytes and bone growth and/or genome size has been proposed for several tetrapod lineages. However, the variation in osteocyte volume acros...
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Zusammenfassung: | Osteocytes, cells embedded within the bone mineral matrix, inform on key
aspects of vertebrate biology. In particular, a relationship between
volumes of the osteocytes and bone growth and/or genome size has been
proposed for several tetrapod lineages. However, the variation in
osteocyte volume across different scales is poorly characterised, and
mostly relies on incomplete, two-dimensional information. In this study,
we characterise the variation of osteocyte volumes in ray-finned fishes
(Actinopterygii), a clade including more than half of modern vertebrate
species in which osteocyte biology is poorly known. We use X-ray
synchrotron micro-computed tomography (SRµCT) to achieve a
three-dimensional visualisation of osteocyte lacunae and direct
measurement of their size (volumes). Our specimen sample is designed to
characterise variation in osteocyte lacuna morphology at three scales:
within a bone, among the bones of one individual and among species. At the
intra-bone scale, we find that osteocyte lacunae vary noticeably in size
between zones of organised and woven bone (being up to six times larger in
woven bone), and across cyclical bone deposition. This is probably
explained by differences in bone deposition rate, with larger osteocyte
lacunae contained in bone that deposits faster. Osteocyte lacuna volumes
vary 3.5-fold among the bones of an individual, and this cannot readily be
explained by variation in bone growth rate or other currently observable
factors. Finally, we find that genome size provides the best explanation
of variation in osteocyte lacuna volume among species: actinopterygian
taxa with larger genomes (polyploid taxa in particular) have larger
osteocyte lacunae (with a nine-fold variation in median osteocyte volume
being measured). Our findings corroborate previous two-dimensional studies
in tetrapods that also observed similar patterns of intra-individual
variation and found a correlation with genome size. This opens new
perspectives for further studies on bone evolution, physiology and
palaeogenomics in actinopterygians, and vertebrates as a whole. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.xksn02vc2 |