Compared to our other senses, scientists don’t know much about how  our skin is wired for the sensation of touch. Now, research reported in  the December 23rd issue of the journal Cell, a Cell Press publication,  provides the first picture of how specialized neurons feel light  touches, like a brush of movement or a vibration, are organized in hairy  skin.
Looking at these neurons in the hairy skin of mice, the researchers  observed remarkably orderly patterns, suggesting that each type of hair  follicle works like a distinct sensory organ, each tuned to register  different types of touches. Each hair follicle sends out one wire-like  projection that joins with others in the spinal cord, where the  information they carry can be integrated into impulses sent to the  brain. This network of neurons in our own skin allows us to perceive  important differences in our surroundings: a raindrop versus a mosquito,  a soft fingertip versus a hard stick.
“We can now begin to appreciate how these hair follicles and  associated neurons are organized relative to one another and that  organization enables us to think about how mechanosensory information is  integrated and processed for the perception of touch,” says David Ginty  of The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Mice have  several types of hair follicles with three in particular that make up  their coats. Ginty’s team made a technical breakthrough by coming up  with a way to label distinct populations of known low-threshold  mechanoreceptors (LTMRs). Before this study, there was no way to  visualize LTMRs in their natural state. The neurons are tricky to study  in part because they extend from the spinal cord all the way out to the  skin. The feeling in the tips of our toes depends on cells that are more  than one meter long.
The images show something unexpected and  fascinating, Ginty says. Each hair follicle type includes a distinct  combination of mechanosensory endings. Those sensory follicles are also  organized in a repeating and stereotypical pattern in mouse skin.
The  neurons found in adjacent hair follicles stretch to a part of the  spinal cord that receives sensory inputs, forming narrow columns. Ginty  says there are probably thousands of those columns in the spinal cord,  each gathering inputs from a particular region of the skin and its patch  of 100 or so hairs.
Of course, we don’t have hair like a mouse,  and it’s not yet clear whether some of these mechanosensory neurons  depend on the hairs themselves to pick up on sensations and whether  others are primarily important as scaffolds for the underlying neural  structures. They don’t know either how these inputs are integrated in  the spinal cord and brain to give rise to perceptions, but now they have  the genetic access they need to tinker with each LTMR subtype one by  one, turning them on or off at will and seeing what happens to the brain  and to behavior. Intriguingly, one of the LTMR types under study is  implicated as “pleasure neurons” in people, Ginty notes.
At this  point, he says they have no clue how these neurons manage to set  themselves up in this way during development. The neurons that form this  sensory network are born at different times, controlled by different  growth factors, and “yet they assemble in these remarkable patterns.”  And for Ginty that leads to a simple if daunting question to answer:  “How does one end of the sensory neuron know what the other end is  doing?”
Article Source: neuroscience.com
 
 
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