Specialized mechanoreceptor systems in rodent glabrous skin

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Authors

Walcher, Jan
Ojeda-Alonso, Julia
Haseleu, Julia
Oosthuizen, Maria Kathleen
Bennett, Nigel Charles
Rowe, Ashlee H.
Lewin, Gary R.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

Rodents use their forepaws to actively interact with their tactile environment. Studies on the physiology and anatomy of glabrous skin that makes up the majority of the forepaw are almost non-existent in themouse.Here we developed a preparation to record from single sensory fibres of the forepaw and compared anatomical and physiological receptor properties to those of the hindpaw glabrous and hairy skin. We found that the mouse forepaw skin is equipped with a very high density of mechanoreceptors; >3 times more than hindpaw glabrous skin. In addition, rapidly adapting mechanoreceptors that innervate Meissner’s corpuscles of the forepaw were severalfold more sensitive to slowly moving mechanical stimuli compared to their counterparts in the hindpaw glabrous skin. All other mechanoreceptor types as well as myelinated nociceptors had physiological properties that were invariant regardless of which skin area they occupied. We discovered a novel D-hair receptor innervating a small group of hairs in the middle of the hindpaw glabrous skin in mice. These glabrous skin D-hair receptors were direction sensitive albeit with an orientation sensitivity opposite to that described for hairy skin D-hair receptors. Glabrous skin hairs do not occur in all rodents, but are present in North American and African rodent species that diverged more than 65 million years ago. The function of these specialized hairs is unknown, but they are nevertheless evolutionarily very ancient. Our study reveals novel physiological specializations of mechanoreceptors in the glabrous skin that likely evolved to facilitate tactile exploration.

Description

Supplementary Video 1. A series of confocal microscopy images (multiple z‐stacks) of one entire footpad showing NF200‐positive fibres innervating Meissner's corpuscles.
Supplementary Video 2. The experimental set‐up for recording directional sensitivity of glabrous D‐hair receptors. The single hairs were moved within a glass capillary and the corresponding single‐unit firing behaviour is shown in response to four axes of movement.
Supplementary Video 3. Maximum intensity projection of tdTomato labelled endings around a single glabrous hair follicle.

Keywords

Rodents, Glabrous skin, Hairy skin, Tactile environment, Evolution, Mechanoreceptor, Touch sensation

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Citation

Walcher, J., Ojeda-Alonso, J., Haseleu, J. et al. 2018, 'Specialized mechanoreceptor systems in rodent glabrous skin', Journal of Physiology, vol. 596, no. 20, pp. 4995-5016.