Department of Mechanical Engineering.
Interdepartmental Neuroscience Program, and.
J Neurosci. 2019 Jul 24;39(30):5881-5896. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2971-18.2019. Epub 2019 May 16.
Rodents are the most commonly studied model system in neuroscience, but surprisingly few studies investigate the natural sensory stimuli that rodent nervous systems evolved to interpret. Even fewer studies examine neural responses to these natural stimuli. Decades of research have investigated the rat vibrissal (whisker) system in the context of direct touch and tactile stimulation, but recent work has shown that rats also use their whiskers to help detect and localize airflow. The present study investigates the neural basis for this ability as dictated by the mechanical response of whiskers to airflow. Mechanical experiments show that a whisker's vibration magnitude depends on airspeed and the intrinsic shape of the whisker. Surprisingly, the direction of the whisker's vibration changes as a function of airflow speed: vibrations transition from parallel to perpendicular with respect to the airflow as airspeed increases. Recordings from primary sensory trigeminal ganglion neurons show that these neurons exhibit responses consistent with those that would be predicted from direct touch. Trigeminal neuron firing rate increases with airspeed, is modulated by the orientation of the whisker relative to the airflow, and is influenced by the whisker's resonant frequencies. We develop a simple model to describe how a population of neurons could leverage mechanical relationships to decode both airspeed and direction. These results open new avenues for studying vibrissotactile regions of the brain in the context of evolutionarily important airflow-sensing behaviors and olfactory search. Although this study used only female rats, all results are expected to generalize to male rats. The rodent vibrissal (whisker) system has been studied for decades in the context of direct tactile sensation, but recent work has indicated that rats also use whiskers to help localize airflow. Neural circuits in somatosensory regions of the rodent brain thus likely evolved in part to process airflow information. This study investigates the whiskers' mechanical response to airflow and the associated neural response. Airspeed affects the magnitude of whisker vibration and the response magnitude of whisker-sensitive primary sensory neurons in the trigeminal ganglion. Surprisingly, the direction of vibration and the associated directionally dependent neural response changes with airspeed. These findings suggest a population code for airflow speed and direction and open new avenues for studying vibrissotactile regions of the brain.
啮齿动物是神经科学中最常用的模型系统,但令人惊讶的是,很少有研究调查啮齿动物神经系统进化来解释的自然感觉刺激。更少的研究检查对这些自然刺激的神经反应。几十年来,研究一直在研究大鼠触须(胡须)系统在直接触摸和触觉刺激的背景下,但最近的工作表明,大鼠也使用它们的胡须来帮助检测和定位气流。本研究根据气流对胡须的机械反应来研究这种能力的神经基础。机械实验表明,胡须的振动幅度取决于风速和胡须的固有形状。令人惊讶的是,随着风速的增加,胡须的振动方向会发生变化:振动从与气流平行过渡到垂直。初级感觉三叉神经节神经元的记录显示,这些神经元的反应与直接触摸预测的反应一致。三叉神经神经元的放电率随风速增加而增加,其方向由胡须相对于气流的方向调制,并受胡须的谐振频率影响。我们开发了一个简单的模型来描述一群神经元如何利用机械关系来解码风速和方向。这些结果为研究在进化上重要的气流感知行为和嗅觉搜索背景下的触须触觉区域开辟了新的途径。虽然本研究仅使用雌性大鼠,但所有结果都有望推广到雄性大鼠。啮齿动物触须(胡须)系统在直接触觉感觉的背景下已经研究了几十年,但最近的工作表明,大鼠也使用胡须来帮助定位气流。因此,啮齿动物大脑感觉区域的神经回路可能部分进化以处理气流信息。本研究调查了气流对胡须的机械反应和相关的神经反应。风速会影响胡须振动的幅度和三叉神经节中胡须敏感的初级感觉神经元的响应幅度。令人惊讶的是,振动的方向和相关的方向依赖的神经反应随风速而变化。这些发现为气流速度和方向提供了一种群体编码,并为研究大脑的触须触觉区域开辟了新的途径。