Tyrannosaurus rex

Mary H. Schweitzer, Jennifer L. Wittmeyer & John R. Horner, 2005, Gender-Specific Reproductive Tissue in Ratites and Tyrannosaurus rex, Science 308, pp. 1456-1460 : 1456-1459

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1126/science.1112158

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3809972

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0942513A-FFA6-FF98-FF01-33FC2461F837

treatment provided by

Jeremy

scientific name

Tyrannosaurus rex
status

 

A relatively small (femur length, 107 cm) Tyrannosaurus rex [ Museum of the Rockies (MOR) specimen number 1125 ] was discovered at the base of the Hell Creek Formation (dated at ~70 million years ago) as an association of disarticulated elements with excellent preservation (1). At death, MOR 1125 was estimated to be 18 T 2 years (2), on the basis of lines of arrested growth (LAG).

Interior femur fragments from MOR 1125 were reserved without preservatives for chem­ ical and molecular analyses. Gross examination revealed a thin layer of bone tissue lining the inner (medullary) surfaces of the bone fragments that was structurally distinct from other described bone types ( Fig. 1D View Fig ) but possessed characteristics in common with avian medullary bone (MB).

MB is an ephemeral tissue, deposited on the endosteal surface of avian long bones (3-10). Its formation in female birds is triggered by increasing levels of gonadal hor­ mones produced upon ovulation (4, 10, 11), but it can also be artificially induced in male birds by the administration of estrogen (3, 4, 12). Because MB is densely mineralized and extremely well vascularized, it provides an easily mobilized source of calcium necessary for the production of calcareous eggshells (13). We compare MB from emu and ostrich (14) at different stages of the laying cycle with newly identified dinosaur tissues, because these basal birds share more primitive features with nonavian dinosaurs than do extant neognaths (15-18).

Our investigations show that ratite MB differs from that seen in better-studied neognaths. We observed substantial variation between emu and ostrich MB tissues and between both ratites and reported neognath tissues ( Fig. 1 View Fig and fig. S1). MB ( Fig. 1 View Fig ) may be thick (chicken and ostrich) or quite thin (emu) at midshaft; and it may be separated by a distinct layer of endosteal laminar bone (ELB) as described by Chinsamy et al. (19) (chicken and emu), or not (ostrich). The innermost layer of MB in the ostrich Eadjacent to the endosteal surface of cortical bone (CB)] appears to arise from dense sheets to form tubular structures that parallel the long axis of the bone ( Fig. 1I View Fig ). Thin hairlike spicules ( Fig. 1C View Fig ) of mineralized bone protrude from the tubes and may be intimately involved in their formation from the basal layer. Mineralized spicules were also noted arising from emu MB (fig. S2), but the tubelike structures were not so apparent or distinct. The MB tissues are morphologically distinct from overlying CB and are similarly distributed in both dinosaur ( Fig. 1D View Fig ) and ratite ( Fig. 1 View Fig , E and F) samples. Higher magnifications of T. rex ( Fig. 1G View Fig ) and ratite ( Fig. 1 View Fig , H and I) tissues show the open, crystalline, and fibrous structure of these highly vascular tissues, in contrast to the denser CB.

In a fresh fracture, dense and relatively homogenous dinosaur CB is distinct from the loosely organized and highly vascular MB internal to it ( Fig. 2A View Fig ). A distinct layer corresponding to ELB (19) separates the two bone types. A large erosion room is visible at this boundary, lined with laminar tissue. An emu bone fragment ( Fig. 2B View Fig ) in similar orientation shows MB tissues with a distinctive, less organized and Bcrumbly[texture relative to overlying CB. It is interspersed with or laid down between large erosion rooms within the deep cortex and ELB of the tibial shaft. The dense cortex and laminar structure of the ELB are easily distinguished from surrounding MB. The ostrich MB ( Fig. 2C View Fig ) differs in both texture and orientation, with open cavities that are bordered by tubelike bone spicules.

The lacy vascularity of the T. rex tissues ( Fig. 2D View Fig ) is consistent with the larger vascular canals and whorled pattern of the emu ( Fig. 2E View Fig ) and especially with the ostrich ( Fig. 2F View Fig ), where wide blood-filled sinuses separate forming bone spicules. In ground section ( Fig. 2G View Fig ), MOR 1125 femur cortical bone is characterized by well-developed multigeneration Haversian systems with obvious and defined cement lines, supporting a mature status for this dinosaur (2). A region of decreased vascularity and laminar structure marks the ELB. In contrast, the medullary tissues arising from the ELB are densely vascularized but show no evidence of Haversian remodeling or cement lines, indicating that this tissue is newly deposited, or younger bone. A fresh cut section of emu bone ( Fig. 2H View Fig ) in comparable orientation shows dense CB and vascular, crystalline, and loosely organized MB, separated by a thin, dense, and less vascular ELB. MB in the ostrich ( Fig. 2I View Fig ) is more extensive than in the emu samples, most likely because shelling had not yet begun (14). No distinct ELB is visible. MB appears laminar rather than spiculated in Fig. 2I View Fig , because the tubules formed by bony spicules are oriented longitudinally rather than in cross section as in Fig. 2F View Fig , but it is the same tissue.

Additional pattern similarities are seen in demineralized (14) ratite ( Fig. 3 View Fig. 3 , B and C) and T. rex ( Fig. 3A View Fig. 3 ) medullary tissues. In all cases, the matrix is fibrous and randomly organized. The reddish color in extant tissues is due to blood retained in sinuses that separate the bone spicules. The T. rex tissues are similarly pigmented, due either to diagenetic alteration or to close association of bony tissues with blood-producing marrow during the life of the dinosaur.

In all MB tissues shown, large vascular sinuses are easily discerned ( Fig. 3 View Fig. 3 , D to F), but in the T. rex, vascular openings are surrounded by circumferentially oriented matrix fibers ( Fig. 3D View Fig. 3 ) that are less apparent in extant bone. The ostrich medullary tissues are denser than either the emu ( Fig. 3E View Fig. 3 ) or T. rex samples, particularly closer to the cortex, but the variation in the size and density of vascular sinuses ( Fig. 3F View Fig. 3 ) is similar to that seen in the T. rex tissues. In planar view, MOR 1125 undemineralized tissues show a random orientation of fibers, and vascular openings penetrate deep into the tissues ( Fig. 3G View Fig. 3 , inset) and exhibit an unusual doublet or triplet pattern, where multiple vessels penetrate an osteonlike core (arrows), also seen in the emu ( Fig. 3 H View Fig. 3 , arrows). The ostrich medullary tissues ( Fig. 3I View Fig. 3 ) are more variable, denser, and less random in appearance than those of the emu, but the morphology changes as the tissues extend into the medullary cavity. Close to the cortex ( Fig. 3I View Fig. 3 , inset, and fig. S3), the bone is sheetlike, relatively dense, and punctured by vascular sinuses exhibiting the doublet pattern (arrows) noted above. As tissues extend into the medullary cavity ( Fig. 3I View Fig. 3 ), this pattern becomes obscured. Inset bone has been stained (14) for better contrast.

In regions of MOR 1125 bone where most of the medullary tissues have eroded ( Fig. 3J View Fig. 3 ), patches of denser CB can be seen, emphasizing the random mazelike pattern and large vascular sinuses of medullary tissues, a pattern also seen in the emu bone ( Fig. 3K View Fig. 3 ). The ostrich MB shows a similar pattern of bony spicules surrounding large and small blood sinuses ( Fig. 3L View Fig. 3 ).

Scanning electron micrographs (14) reveal the distinctive grainy texture and disorganized morphology of demineralized T. rex and avian MB ( Fig. 4 View Fig ). This contrasts with the smooth and fibrous texture of demineralized CB from the same specimens ( Fig. 4, E to H View Fig ). Higher magnifications of demineralized CB ( Fig. 4, I to K View Fig ) emphasize the smooth, fibrous, and more ordered nature of all specimens, although in MOR 1125 ( Fig. 4I View Fig ), degradation is apparent.

MB occurs naturally only in extant female birds, although it varies in amount and distribution among taxa and with ovulatory phase (5, 20). It is chemically, functionally, and structurally distinct from both overlying CB and internal trabecular bone (21, 22). Although "medullary" and "trabecular" bone are terms often used interchangeably in the literature, MB has a larger surface area and is more vascular than other bone types, allowing rapid calcium mobilization (5). It is more highly mineralized, with a greater apatite-tocollagen ratio (5, 7, 20-22), and incorporates acidic mucopolysaccharides and glycosaminoglycans that are not present in CB (5, 11). Additionally, the matrix of MB is higher in noncollagenous proteins and lower in collagen, and has a higher collagen III-to-collagen I ratio (22) relative to other bone types. If preservation allows, these characteristics will be used as part of ongoing research to chemically distinguish the two bone types in this dinosaur.

The existence of avian-type MB in dinosaurs has been hypothesized (9, 23) but not identified. In part, this could be because of taphonomic bias, because the death and fossilization of an ovulating dinosaur would be comparatively rare. Additionally, MB in extant birds is fragile, the spicules separating easily from the originating layer (fig. S1). Dinosaur MB may separate and be lost from overlying CB in a similar manner during diagenesis.

The location, origin, morphology, and microstructure of the new T. rex tissues support homology with ratite MB. The T. rex tissues line the medullary cavities of both femora of MOR 1125 , suggesting an organismal response. The tissues are similar in distribution to those of extant ratites, being more extensive in proximal regions of the bone. They are clearly endosteal in origin, and the microstructure with large vascular sinuses is consistent with the function of MB as a rapidly deposited and easily mobilized calcium source. The random, woven character indicates rapidly deposited, younger bone. Finally, the robustly supported relationship between theropods and extant birds (15-18, 24, 25) permits the application of phylogenetic inference to support the identification of these tissues (26, 27).

The morphology of these dinosaur tissues is not identical to that of extant neognaths (fig. S1), but is more similar to that seen in ratites. T. rex medullary tissues are less extensive than those reported for neognaths, which may be explained by many factors. First, there is a wide range of MB morphologies in extant taxa (20), varying with both reproductive phase and the position of the egg within the reproductive tract (6). Medullary tissues become thinner as shelling progresses and disappear completely with deposition of the last egg. If the same was true of dinosaurs, MOR 1125 may have died toward the end of the laying cycle. Second, MB in extant birds is hypothesized to provide a buffer against excessive and debilitating bone resorption during shelling (4, 28). It is most extensive in smaller taxa with high reproductive rates, because of the demand for rapid mobilization of skeletal calcium for shelling. Extinct theropods produced hardshelled eggs, as did other dinosaurs and all extant birds (29, 30). Although egg size is not known, eggs were most likely smaller relative to overall body size than in extant birds, resulting in less demand for bone calcium reserves and reducing the need to offset resorption. These factors may also contribute to the smaller ratio of medullary to cortical thickness in theropods than in extant birds. Finally, T. rex, although phylogenetically close to extant birds (15-18, 24, 25), was distinct in size, biomechanical constraints, and, to some degree, physiology (31); therefore, slight variations in bone and tissue types would be expected.

MB most likely first evolved within the lineage in early, small theropods with high productivity. A relatively thicker tyrannosaur bone cortex would reduce the need for MB, and its presence in MOR 1125 may reflect the retention of a primitive trait. This hypothesis may be tested by examination of the limb bones of the recently reported oviraptor containing eggs in the reproductive tract (32). The existence of MB in crocodiles has been referred to anecdotally (3, 21), but although they do resorb CB during shelling, experimental evidence suggests that they do not form MB (6, 9, 11, 12), even after stimulation with estrogen (33). The identification of medullary tissues in dinosaurs supports a closer relationship to birds than to other extant archosaurs, sheds light on reproductive strategies of nonavian theropods, and provides an objective means of gender determination in extinct dinosaurs.

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