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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 5 May 2002, pp. 2602-2611
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Division of Life Sciences, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas 78249; and 2Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37235
Sachdev, Robert N. S. and
Kenneth C. Catania.
Receptive Fields and Response Properties of Neurons in
the Star-Nosed Mole's Somatosensory Fovea. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 2602-2611, 2002. Star-nosed moles
have an extraordinary mechanosensory system consisting of 22 densely
innervated nasal appendages covered with thousands of sensitive touch
domes. A single appendage acts as the fovea and the star is constantly
shifted to touch this foveal appendage to objects of interest. Here we
investigated the receptive fields on the star and the response
properties of 144 neurons in the mole's primary somatosensory cortex
(S1). Excitatory receptive fields were defined by recording multiunit
activity from the S1 representations of the nasal appendages that form the star, while stimulating the touch domes on the skin surface with a
small probe. Receptive fields were among the smallest reported for
mammalian glabrous skin, averaging <1 mm2. The smallest
receptive fields were found for the fovea representation, corresponding
to its greater cortical magnification. Single units were then isolated,
primarily from the representation of the somatosensory fovea, and the
skin surface was stimulated with a small probe attached to a
piezoelectric wafer controlled by a computer interface. The response
properties of neurons and the locations of inhibitory surrounds were
evaluated with two complementary approaches. In the first set of
experiments, single microelectrodes were used to isolate unit activity
in S1, and data were collected for stimulation to different areas of
the sensory star. In the second set of experiments, a multi-electrode
array (4 electrodes spaced at 200 µm in a linear sequence) was used
to simultaneously record from isolated units in different cortical
areas representing different parts of the sensory periphery. These
experiments revealed a short-latency excitatory discharge to
stimulation of the fovea followed by a long-lasting suppression of
spontaneous activity. Sixty-one percent of neurons responded with an
excitatory OFF response at the end of the stimulus; the
remaining 39% of cells did not respond or were inhibited at stimulus
offset. Stimulation of areas surrounding the central receptive field
often revealed inhibitory surrounds. Forty percent of the neurons that
responded to mechanosensory stimulation of the receptive field center
were inhibited by stimulation of surrounding areas of skin on the same
appendage. In contrast to neurons in rodent barrels, few neurons within
a stripe representing an appendage responded to stimulation of
neighboring (nonprimary) appendages on the snout. The small receptive
fields, short latencies, and inhibitory surrounds are consistent with
the star's role in rapidly determining the locations and identities of
objects in a complex tactile environment.
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