Meissner corpuscles and their spatially intermingled afferents underlie gentle touch perception
Author(s) -
Nicole Neubarth,
Alan J. Emanuel,
Yin Liu,
Mark W. Springel,
Annie Handler,
Qiyu Zhang,
Brendan P. Lehnert,
Chong Guo,
Lauren L. Orefice,
Amira Abdelaziz,
Michelle M. DeLisle,
Michael Iskols,
Julia Rhyins,
Soo J. Kim,
Stuart Cattel,
Wade G. Regehr,
Christopher D. Harvey,
Jan Drugowitsch,
David D. Ginty
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.abb2751
Subject(s) - neuroscience , mechanoreceptor , biology , receptive field , anatomy , perception , sensory system , physics
Secrets of Meissner corpuscles The Meissner corpuscle, a mechanosensory end organ, was discovered more than 165 years ago and has since been found in the glabrous skin of all mammals, including that on human fingertips. Although prominently featured in textbooks, the function of the Meissner corpuscle is unknown. Neubarthet al. generated adult mice without Meissner corpuscles and used them to show that these corpuscles alone mediate behavioral responses to, and perception of, gentle forces (see the Perspective by Marshall and Patapoutian). Each Meissner corpuscle is innervated by two molecularly distinct, yet physiologically similar, mechanosensory neurons. These two neuronal subtypes are developmentally interdependent and their endings are intertwined within the corpuscle. Both Meissner mechanosensory neuron subtypes are homotypically tiled, ensuring uniform and complete coverage of the skin, yet their receptive fields are overlapping and offset with respect to each other.Science , this issue p.eabb2751 ; see also p.1311
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