How did teeth evolve Peter S. Ungar

You may take them for granted,
but your teeth are a marvel.

They break up all your food
over the course of your life,

while being strong enough
to withstand breakage themselves.

And they’re formed using
only the raw materials

from the food they grind down
in the first place.

What’s behind their impressive strength?

Teeth rely on an ingenious structure
that makes them both hard and tough.

Hardness can be thought of as the ability
to resist a crack from starting,

while toughness is what stops
the crack from spreading

Very few materials have both properties.

For instance, glass is hard but not tough,

while leather is tough but not hard.

Teeth manage both by having two layers:

a hard external cap of enamel, made up
almost entirely of a calcium phosphate,

and beneath it,
a tougher layer of dentin,

partly formed from organic fibers
that make it flexible.

This amazing structure is created
by two types of cells:

ameloblasts that secrete enamel

and odontoblasts that secrete dentin.

As they form teeth,
odontoblasts move inward,

while ameloblasts move out
and slough off when they hit the surface.

For enamel, this process produces long,
thin strands,

each about 60 nanometers in diameter.

That’s one one-thousandth
the width of a human hair.

Those are bundled into rods,
packed together,

tens of thousands per square millimeter,

to form the shield-like enamel layer.

Once this process is finished,
your enamel can’t repair itself again

because all the cells
that make it are lost,

so we’re lucky that enamel
can’t be easily destroyed.

Odontoblasts use a more complex process,
but unlike ameloblasts, they stick around,

continuing to secrete dentin
throughout your life.

Despite the differences in teeth
across the mammalian order,

the underlying process of tooth growth
is the same whether it’s for lions,

kangaroos,

elephants,

or us.

What changes is how nature sculpts
the shape of the tooth,

altering the folding and growth patterns

to suit the distinct diets
of different species.

Cows have flat molar teeth with parallel
ridges for grinding tough grasses.

Cats have sharp crested molars,
like blades, for shearing meat and sinew.

Pigs have blunt, thick ones,
useful for crushing hard roots and seeds.

The myriad molars of modern mammals

can be traced back to a common form
called “tribosphenic,"

which first appeared
during the dinosaur age.

In the 19th Century,
paleontologist Edward Drinker Cope

developed the basic model
for how this form evolved.

He hypothesized that
it started with a cone-like tooth,

as we see in many fishes,
amphibians, and reptiles.

Small cusps were then added,
so the tooth had three in a row,

aligned front to back,
and connected by crests.

Over time, the cusps were pushed out
of line to make triangular crowns.

Adjacent teeth formed a continuous
zigzag of crests for slicing and dicing.

A low shelf then formed
at the back of each set of teeth,

which became a platform for crushing.

As Cope realized, the tribosphenic molar
served as the jumping-off point

for the radiation of specialized
forms to follow,

each shaped by evolutionary needs.

Straighten the crests
and remove the shelf,

and you’ve got the conveniently
bladed teeth of cats and dogs.

Remove the front cusp, raise the shelf,
and you’ve got our human molars.

A few additional tweaks get you
a horse or cow tooth.

Some details in Cope’s intuitive
hypothesis proved wrong.

But in the fossil record,

there are examples of teeth
that look just as he predicted

and we can trace the molars of all living
mammals back to that primitive form.

Today, the ability to consume
diverse forms of food

enables mammals to survive in habitats

ranging from mountain peaks
and ocean depths

to rainforests and deserts.

So the success of our biological class
is due in no small measure

to the remarkable strength
and adaptability

of the humble mammalian molar.