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Publication : Cortical responses to touch reflect subcortical integration of LTMR signals.

First Author  Emanuel AJ Year  2021
Journal  Nature Volume  600
Issue  7890 Pages  680-685
PubMed ID  34789880 Mgi Jnum  J:349378
Mgi Id  MGI:7287972 Doi  10.1038/s41586-021-04094-x
Citation  Emanuel AJ, et al. (2021) Cortical responses to touch reflect subcortical integration of LTMR signals. Nature 600(7890):680-685
abstractText  Current models to explain how signals emanating from cutaneous mechanoreceptors generate representations of touch are based on comparisons of the tactile responses of mechanoreceptor subtypes and neurons in somatosensory cortex(1-8). Here we used mouse genetic manipulations to investigate the contributions of peripheral mechanoreceptor subtypes to cortical responses to touch. Cortical neurons exhibited remarkably homogeneous and transient responses to skin indentation that resembled rapidly adapting (RA) low-threshold mechanoreceptor (LTMR) responses. Concurrent disruption of signals from both Abeta RA-LTMRs and Abeta slowly adapting (SA)-LTMRs eliminated cortical responses to light indentation forces. However, disruption of either LTMR subtype alone caused opposite shifts in cortical sensitivity but otherwise largely unaltered tactile responses, indicating that both subtypes contribute to normal cortical responses. Selective optogenetic activation of single action potentials in Abeta RA-LTMRs or Abeta SA-LTMRs drove low-latency responses in most mechanically sensitive cortical neurons. Similarly, most somatosensory thalamic neurons were also driven by activation of Abeta RA-LTMRs or Abeta SA-LTMRs. These findings support a model in which signals from physiologically distinct mechanoreceptor subtypes are extensively integrated and transformed within the subcortical somatosensory system to generate cortical representations of touch.
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