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The secondary somatosensory cortex gates mechanical and heat sensitivity.

Daniel G TaubQiufen JiangFrancesca PietrafesaJunfeng SuAloe CarrollCaitlin GreeneMichael R BlanchardAakanksha JainMahmoud El-RifaiAlexis CallenKatherine YagerClara ChungZhigang HeChinfei ChenClifford J Woolf
Published in: Nature communications (2024)
The cerebral cortex is vital for the processing and perception of sensory stimuli. In the somatosensory axis, information is received primarily by two distinct regions, the primary (S1) and secondary (S2) somatosensory cortices. Top-down circuits stemming from S1 can modulate mechanical and cooling but not heat stimuli such that circuit inhibition causes blunted perception. This suggests that responsiveness to particular somatosensory stimuli occurs in a modality specific fashion and we sought to determine additional cortical substrates. In this work, we identify in a mouse model that inhibition of S2 output increases mechanical and heat, but not cooling sensitivity, in contrast to S1. Combining 2-photon anatomical reconstruction with chemogenetic inhibition of specific S2 circuits, we discover that S2 projections to the secondary motor cortex (M2) govern mechanical and heat sensitivity without affecting motor performance or anxiety. Taken together, we show that S2 is an essential cortical structure that governs mechanical and heat sensitivity.
Keyphrases
  • heat stress
  • mouse model
  • transcranial direct current stimulation
  • magnetic resonance
  • healthcare
  • functional connectivity
  • magnetic resonance imaging