Chemical and mechanical patterning of tortoise skin scales occur in different regions of the head.

  • publication
  • 04-07-2025

Cooper, Jahanbakhsh, Milinkovitch. iScience 2025 Jun (28:6); 112684 PMC12225933. 10.1016/j.isci.2025.112684. S2589-0042(25)00945-9.

Vertebrate skin appendages are diverse micro-organs such as scales, feathers, and hair. These units typically develop from placodes, whose spatial patterning involves conserved chemical reaction-diffusion dynamics. Crocodile head scales are a spectacular exception to this paradigm, as they instead arise from a mechanically dominated process of compressive folding driven by constrained skin growth. Here, we reveal that chemical versus mechanical processes pattern tortoise scales in different regions of their head. Indeed, we show that placode-derived scales emerge across the peripheral head surfaces while remaining absent from the central dorsal region where scales subsequently form through a mechanical folding process. Using light sheet microscopy, we build a three-dimensional mechanical model that qualitatively recapitulates the diversity of scale patterns observed in this central head region in different tortoise species. Overall, our analyses indicate that mechanical head-scale patterning likely arose before the divergence between Testudinata and Archosauria, and was subsequently lost in birds.

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