Developing an Infrastructure for Biodistance Research Using Deciduous Dental Phenotypes

abstract: Bioarchaeologists often use dental data and spatial analysis of cemeteries to infer the biological and social structure of ancient communities. This approach is commonly referred to as biological distance (“biodistance”) analysis. While permanent crown data feature prominently in these eff...

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Other Authors: Paul, Kathleen Siobhan (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.46211
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-46211
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-462112019-12-19T03:00:55Z Developing an Infrastructure for Biodistance Research Using Deciduous Dental Phenotypes abstract: Bioarchaeologists often use dental data and spatial analysis of cemeteries to infer the biological and social structure of ancient communities. This approach is commonly referred to as biological distance (“biodistance”) analysis. While permanent crown data feature prominently in these efforts, few studies have verified the accuracy of biodistance methods for recognizing child relatives using deciduous teeth. Thus, as subadults comprise an essential demographic subset of mortuary assemblages, deciduous phenotypes may represent a critical but underutilized source of information on the underlying genetic structure of past populations. The goal of the dissertation is to​ quantitatively analyze the developmental program underlying deciduous phenotypes and​ to evaluate their performance in accurately reconstructing known genealogical relationships.​ This project quantifies morphological variation of deciduous and permanent tooth crowns from stone dental casts representing individuals of known pedigree deriving from three distinct populations: European Canadians, European Australians, and Aboriginal Australians. To address the paucity of deciduous-focused validation research, phenotypic distances generated from the dental data are subjected to performance analyses (biodistance simulations) and compared to genetic distances between individuals. While family-specific results vary, crown morphology performs moderately well in distinguishing relatives from non-relatives. Comparisons between deciduous and permanent results (i.e., Euclidean distances, Mantel tests, multidimensional scaling output) indicate that deciduous crown variation provides a more direct reflection of the underlying genetic structure of pedigreed samples. The morphology data are then analyzed within a quantitative genetic framework using maximum likelihood variance components analysis. Novel narrow-sense heritability and pleiotropy estimates are generated for the complete suite of deciduous and permanent crown characters, which facilitates comparisons between samples, traits, dentitions, arcades, antimeres, metameres, scoring standards, and dichotomization breakpoints. Results indicate wide-ranging but moderate heritability estimates for morphological traits, as well as low to moderate integration for characters within (deciduous-deciduous; permanent-permanent) and between (deciduous-permanent) dentitions. On average, deciduous and permanent homologues are more strongly genetically correlated than characters within the same tooth row. Results are interpreted with respect to dental development and biodistance methodology. Ultimately, the dissertation empirically validates the use of dental morphology as a proxy for underlying genetic information, including deciduous characters. Dissertation/Thesis Paul, Kathleen Siobhan (Author) Stojanowski, Christopher M. (Advisor) Buikstra, Jane E. (Committee member) Schwartz, Gary T. (Committee member) Taylor, Jesse E. (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Physical anthropology Archaeology bioarchaeology biodistance analysis deciduous teeth dental anthropology heritability quantitative genetics eng 794 pages Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2017 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.46211 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2017
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Physical anthropology
Archaeology
bioarchaeology
biodistance analysis
deciduous teeth
dental anthropology
heritability
quantitative genetics
spellingShingle Physical anthropology
Archaeology
bioarchaeology
biodistance analysis
deciduous teeth
dental anthropology
heritability
quantitative genetics
Developing an Infrastructure for Biodistance Research Using Deciduous Dental Phenotypes
description abstract: Bioarchaeologists often use dental data and spatial analysis of cemeteries to infer the biological and social structure of ancient communities. This approach is commonly referred to as biological distance (“biodistance”) analysis. While permanent crown data feature prominently in these efforts, few studies have verified the accuracy of biodistance methods for recognizing child relatives using deciduous teeth. Thus, as subadults comprise an essential demographic subset of mortuary assemblages, deciduous phenotypes may represent a critical but underutilized source of information on the underlying genetic structure of past populations. The goal of the dissertation is to​ quantitatively analyze the developmental program underlying deciduous phenotypes and​ to evaluate their performance in accurately reconstructing known genealogical relationships.​ This project quantifies morphological variation of deciduous and permanent tooth crowns from stone dental casts representing individuals of known pedigree deriving from three distinct populations: European Canadians, European Australians, and Aboriginal Australians. To address the paucity of deciduous-focused validation research, phenotypic distances generated from the dental data are subjected to performance analyses (biodistance simulations) and compared to genetic distances between individuals. While family-specific results vary, crown morphology performs moderately well in distinguishing relatives from non-relatives. Comparisons between deciduous and permanent results (i.e., Euclidean distances, Mantel tests, multidimensional scaling output) indicate that deciduous crown variation provides a more direct reflection of the underlying genetic structure of pedigreed samples. The morphology data are then analyzed within a quantitative genetic framework using maximum likelihood variance components analysis. Novel narrow-sense heritability and pleiotropy estimates are generated for the complete suite of deciduous and permanent crown characters, which facilitates comparisons between samples, traits, dentitions, arcades, antimeres, metameres, scoring standards, and dichotomization breakpoints. Results indicate wide-ranging but moderate heritability estimates for morphological traits, as well as low to moderate integration for characters within (deciduous-deciduous; permanent-permanent) and between (deciduous-permanent) dentitions. On average, deciduous and permanent homologues are more strongly genetically correlated than characters within the same tooth row. Results are interpreted with respect to dental development and biodistance methodology. Ultimately, the dissertation empirically validates the use of dental morphology as a proxy for underlying genetic information, including deciduous characters. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Anthropology 2017
author2 Paul, Kathleen Siobhan (Author)
author_facet Paul, Kathleen Siobhan (Author)
title Developing an Infrastructure for Biodistance Research Using Deciduous Dental Phenotypes
title_short Developing an Infrastructure for Biodistance Research Using Deciduous Dental Phenotypes
title_full Developing an Infrastructure for Biodistance Research Using Deciduous Dental Phenotypes
title_fullStr Developing an Infrastructure for Biodistance Research Using Deciduous Dental Phenotypes
title_full_unstemmed Developing an Infrastructure for Biodistance Research Using Deciduous Dental Phenotypes
title_sort developing an infrastructure for biodistance research using deciduous dental phenotypes
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.46211
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