Journal
JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE NEUROLOGY
Volume 445, Issue 4, Pages 347-359Publisher
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cne.10196
Keywords
digit; cutaneous innervation; sensory endings; primate
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Funding
- NINDS NIH HHS [NS34692] Funding Source: Medline
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Recent electrophysiological studies demonstrated that neurons in the somatosensory cortex of monkeys respond to tangential forces applied to glabrous skin. To unravel the peripheral basis for this cortical response, we determined the distribution of presumptive low-threshold mechnoreceptors innervating the distal finger pads of monkeys. Endings were reconstructed in immunolabeled serial sections imaged by epifluorescence and confocal microscopy. Although classically implicated as cutaneous stretch receptors, no Ruffini corpuscles were found in the glabrous skin. Ruffini-like endings were only detected at the base of the finger nails. Pacinian corpuscles were sparsely distributed in the deep dermis. Meissner corpuscles (MCs) in dermal papillary ridges had a comparably high density in the thumb, index, and fifth fingers. Each MC was innervated by several large-caliber axons. Within the limits of our reconstructions, some of these axons terminated in only one MC, whereas others innervated several MCs. Merkel endings covered about 80% of the base of the intermediate epidermal ridges that form the pattern of fingerprints. In some cases, the distal tip of a Merkel-related axon gave rise to a several terminal branches that supplied endings to tightly circumscribed (30-70 mum) clusters of Merkel cells. In other cases, the nodes of axons gave rise to en passant branches that formed extended chains of endings among Merkel cells spread over territories up to 300 mum long, Based on their relatively diffuse distributions, the axons that innervate multiple MCs or the axons with en passant Merkel terminations seem most suited to transduce tangential forces. (C) 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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