Mirror, mirror? An evaluation of identical twin mirroring in tooth crown morphology

Author:

McCrary Tess12,Hughes Toby3,Brook Alan H.34,Paul Kathleen S.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology University of Arkansas Fayetteville Arkansas USA

2. University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Dentistry Memphis Tennessee USA

3. Adelaide Dental School The University of Adelaide Adelaide SA Australia

4. Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry Queen Mary University of London London United Kingdom

Abstract

AbstractIt has been estimated that 25% of monozygotic (“identical”) twin pairs exhibit reverse asymmetry (RA) or “mirroring” of minor anatomical features as a result of delayed zygote division. Here, we examine whether identical twin mirroring accounts for patterns of dental asymmetry in a sample of monozygotic and dizygotic (“fraternal”) twins. We focus on crown morphology to approach the following question: is there an association between dental RA frequency and twin type suggestive of the presence of mirror image twins in our sample? Data were collected from 208 deciduous and 196 permanent dentitions of participants of the University of Adelaide Twin Study using Arizona State University Dental Anthropology System standards. RA frequencies were compared across morphological complexes (deciduous, permanent), twin types (monozygotic, dizygotic), and traits. Fisher's exact tests were performed to formally evaluate the association between twin type and dental RA. Across the entire dataset, RA rates failed to exceed 8% for any twin type. In monozygotic twins, deciduous mirroring totaled 5.3% of observed cases, while permanent mirroring totaled 7.8% of observed cases. We found no statistically significant association between RA and twin type for any morphological character (p‐value range: 0.07–1.00). Our results suggest the timing of monozygotic twin division does not explain the structure of asymmetry for our morphology dataset and that published estimates of identical twin mirroring rates may be inflated or contingent upon phenotype. Instead, rates reported for this sample more closely align with the proposed etiology of this condition.

Funder

Wenner-Gren Foundation

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

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