Cutaneous mechanoreceptors are localized in the various layers of the skin where they detect a wide range of mechanical stimuli, including light brush, stretch, vibration and noxious pressure. This variety of stimuli is matched by a diverse array of specialized mechanoreceptors that respond to cutaneous deformation in a specific way and relay these stimuli to higher brain structures. Studies across mechanoreceptors and genetically tractable sensory nerve endings are beginning to uncover touch sensation mechanisms. Work in this field has provided researchers with a more thorough understanding of the circuit organization underlying the perception of touch. Novel ion channels have emerged as candidates for transduction molecules and properties of mechanically gated currents improved our understanding of the mechanisms of adaptation to tactile stimuli. This review highlights the progress made in characterizing functional properties of mechanoreceptors in hairy and glabrous skin and ion channels that detect mechanical inputs and shape mechanoreceptor adaptation.
In the skin, Merkel cells connect with keratinocytes and Aβ nerve fibers to form a touch receptor that functions as a slow adapting mechanoreceptor (slow adapting type 1). In human and mouse Merkel cells, we observed an increased concentration of intracellular Ca ions in response to cold temperature and transient receptor potential melastatine 8 (TRPM8) ion channel agonists. A reduction in the response to cooling and TRPM8 agonists occurred after the addition of TRPM8 antagonists, as well as in TRPM8 knockout mice. Cold temperature and TRPM8 agonists also induced a current that was inhibited by a TRPM8 antagonist. Our results indicate that Merkel cells sense cooling through TRPM8 channels. We hypothesized that cooling modulates the slow adapting type 1 receptor response. Cooling mouse skin to 22°C reduced the slow adapting type 1 receptor discharge frequency. Interestingly, we observed no such reduction in TRPM8 knockout mice. Similarly, in human skin, a temperature of 22°C applied to the slow adapting type 1 receptive field reduced the spiking discharge. Altogether, our results indicate that Merkel cells are polymodal sensory cells that respond to mild cold stimuli through the activation of TRPM8 channels. Thermal activation of Merkel cells, and possibly other TRPM8-expressing non-neuronal cells, such as keratinocytes, potentially adapts the discharge of slow adapting type 1 receptors during cooling.
Mechanotransduction, the conversion of a mechanical stimulus into a biological response, constitutes the basis of a variety of physiological functions such as the senses of touch, balance, proprioception, blood pressure, and hearing. In vertebrates, mechanosensation is mediated by mechanosensory neurons, whose cell bodies are located in trigeminal and dorsal root ganglia. Here, we describe an in vitro model of mechanotransduction that provides an opportunity to explore the properties of mechanosensitive channels in mammalian sensory neurons. The mechano-clamp method allows applying local force on plasma membrane of whole-cell patch-clamped sensory neurons. This technique uses a mechanical probe driven by a computer-assisted piezoelectric microstage to repeatedly stimulate sensory neurons with accurate control of stimulus strength, duration, and speed.
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