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Sensory Afferents Use Different Coding Strategies for Heat and Cold
Author(s) -
Feng Wang,
Erik Bélanger,
Sylvain Côté,
Patrick Desrosiers,
Steven A. Prescott,
Daniel Côté,
Yves De Koninck
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
cell reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.264
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 2639-1856
pISSN - 2211-1247
DOI - 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.04.065
Subject(s) - somatosensory system , neuroscience , dorsal root ganglion , sensory system , afferent , population , neural coding , neuron , thermoreceptor , coding (social sciences) , biology , spinal cord , sensory neuron , medicine , statistics , mathematics , environmental health
Primary afferents transduce environmental stimuli into electrical activity that is transmitted centrally to be decoded into corresponding sensations. However, it remains unknown how afferent populations encode different somatosensory inputs. To address this, we performed two-photon Ca 2+ imaging from thousands of dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons in anesthetized mice while applying mechanical and thermal stimuli to hind paws. We found that approximately half of all neurons are polymodal and that heat and cold are encoded very differently. As temperature increases, more heating-sensitive neurons are activated, and most individual neurons respond more strongly, consistent with graded coding at population and single-neuron levels, respectively. In contrast, most cooling-sensitive neurons respond in an ungraded fashion, inconsistent with graded coding and suggesting combinatorial coding, based on which neurons are co-activated. Although individual neurons may respond to multiple stimuli, our results show that different stimuli activate distinct combinations of diversely tuned neurons, enabling rich population-level coding.

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