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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 5 May 2001, pp. 1793-1804
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
School of Physiology and Pharmacology, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia
Coleman, G. T.,
H. Bahramali,
H. Q. Zhang, and
M. J. Rowe.
Characterization of Tactile Afferent Fibers in the Hand of the
Marmoset Monkey. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 1793-1804, 2001. The marmoset monkey, Callithrix jacchus, has
increasingly been the subject of experiments for the analysis of
somatosensory system function in simian primates. However, as response
properties of the mechanoreceptive afferent fibers supplying the skin
have not been characterized for this primate, the present study was undertaken to classify fibers innervating the glabrous skin of the
marmoset hand and determine whether they resembled those described for
other mammalian species, including cat, macaque monkey, and human
subjects. Forty-seven tactile afferent fibers with receptive fields
(RFs) on the glabrous skin of the hand were isolated in fine median and
ulnar nerve strands. Controlled tactile stimuli, including static
indentation and skin vibration, were used to classify fibers.
Twenty-six (55%) responded to static indentation in a sustained manner
and were designated slowly adapting (SA) fibers, while 21 (45%) were selectively sensitive to the dynamic components of the
stimulus. The SA fibers had well-defined boundaries to their RFs,
lacked spontaneous activity in most cases (23/26 fibers), had an
irregular pattern of discharge to static skin indentation, and
displayed graded response levels as a function of indentation
amplitude, attributes that were consistent with the properties of
slowly adapting type I (SAI) fibers described in other species. The
dynamically sensitive afferent fibers could be subdivided
into two distinct functional classes, based on their responses to
vibrotactile stimulation. The majority (15/21) responded best to lower
frequency vibration (~10-50 Hz) and had small RFs, whereas the
second class responded preferentially to higher frequency vibration
(50-700 Hz) with maximal sensitivity at ~200-300 Hz. These two
classes resembled, respectively, the rapidly adapting (RA)
and Pacinian corpuscle-related (PC) fiber classes found in other species, and like them, responded to vibration with tightly phase-locked patterns of response over a wide range of
frequencies. The results demonstrate that the functional classes of
tactile afferent fibers that supply the glabrous skin in the marmoset monkey appear to correspond with those described previously for the cat
and macaque monkey, and are similar to those supplying the human hand
and fingers, although the SA fibers in the human hand appear to fall
into two classes, the SAI and SAII fibers. With the increasing use of
the marmoset monkey as a primate model for somatosensory system
studies, these data now allow tactile neurons identified at central
locations, such as the cerebral cortex and thalamus, to be classified
in relation to inputs from the peripheral classes identified in the
present study.
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