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1.
Neuron ; 106(5): 830-841.e3, 2020 06 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32208171

ABSTRACT

Humans detect skin temperature changes that are perceived as warm or cool. Like humans, mice report forepaw skin warming with perceptual thresholds of less than 1°C and do not confuse warm with cool. We identify two populations of polymodal C-fibers that signal warm. Warm excites one population, whereas it suppresses the ongoing cool-driven firing of the other. In the absence of the thermosensitive TRPM2 or TRPV1 ion channels, warm perception was blunted, but not abolished. In addition, trpv1:trpa1:trpm3-/- triple-mutant mice that cannot sense noxious heat detected skin warming, albeit with reduced sensitivity. In contrast, loss or local pharmacological silencing of the cool-driven TRPM8 channel abolished the ability to detect warm. Our data are not reconcilable with a labeled line model for warm perception, with receptors firing only in response to warm stimuli, but instead support a conserved dual sensory model to unambiguously detect skin warming in vertebrates.


Subject(s)
Nerve Fibers, Unmyelinated/physiology , Nociception/physiology , Perception/physiology , TRPM Cation Channels/genetics , TRPV Cation Channels/genetics , Thermosensing/genetics , Animals , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Mutation , Sensory Thresholds , Thermosensing/physiology , Upper Extremity
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26293318

ABSTRACT

In many communication systems, information is encoded in the temporal pattern of signals. For rhythmic signals that carry information in specific frequency bands, a neuronal system may profit from tuning its inherent filtering properties towards a peak sensitivity in the respective frequency range. The cricket Gryllus bimaculatus evaluates acoustic communication signals of both conspecifics and predators. The song signals of conspecifics exhibit a characteristic pulse pattern that contains only a narrow range of modulation frequencies. We examined individual neurons (AN1, AN2, ON1) in the peripheral auditory system of the cricket for tuning towards specific modulation frequencies by assessing their firing-rate resonance. Acoustic stimuli with a swept-frequency envelope allowed an efficient characterization of the cells' modulation transfer functions. Some of the examined cells exhibited tuned band-pass properties. Using simple computational models, we demonstrate how different, cell-intrinsic or network-based mechanisms such as subthreshold resonances, spike-triggered adaptation, as well as an interplay of excitation and inhibition can account for the experimentally observed firing-rate resonances. Therefore, basic neuronal mechanisms that share negative feedback as a common theme may contribute to selectivity in the peripheral auditory pathway of crickets that is designed towards mate recognition and predator avoidance.


Subject(s)
Action Potentials/physiology , Ganglia, Invertebrate/physiology , Gryllidae/physiology , Hearing/physiology , Neurons/physiology , Acoustic Stimulation , Animals , Auditory Pathways/physiology , Computer Simulation , Female , Linear Models , Models, Neurological , Nonlinear Dynamics
3.
Eur J Neurosci ; 42(7): 2390-406, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26179973

ABSTRACT

Sensory systems process stimuli that greatly vary in intensity and complexity. To maintain efficient information transmission, neural systems need to adjust their properties to these different sensory contexts, yielding adaptive or stimulus-dependent codes. Here, we demonstrated adaptive spectrotemporal tuning in a small neural network, i.e. the peripheral auditory system of the cricket. We found that tuning of cricket auditory neurons was sharper for complex multi-band than for simple single-band stimuli. Information theoretical considerations revealed that this sharpening improved information transmission by separating the neural representations of individual stimulus components. A network model inspired by the structure of the cricket auditory system suggested two putative mechanisms underlying this adaptive tuning: a saturating peripheral nonlinearity could change the spectral tuning, whereas broad feed-forward inhibition was able to reproduce the observed adaptive sharpening of temporal tuning. Our study revealed a surprisingly dynamic code usually found in more complex nervous systems and suggested that stimulus-dependent codes could be implemented using common neural computations.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/physiology , Auditory Perception/physiology , Electrophysiological Phenomena/physiology , Gryllidae/physiology , Neural Networks, Computer , Action Potentials/physiology , Animals , Female
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