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Activity-dependent development of the body's touch receptors.

Celine SantiagoNikhil SharmaNusrat AfricawalaJulianna SiegristAnnie HandlerAniqa TasnimRabia AnjumJosef TurecekBrendan P LehnertSophia RenauldMichael Nolan-TamarizMichael IskolsAlexandra R MageeSuzanne ParadisDavid D Ginty
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
We report a role for activity in the development of the primary sensory neurons that detect touch. Genetic deletion of Piezo2, the principal mechanosensitive ion channel in somatosensory neurons, caused profound changes in the formation of mechanosensory end organ structures and altered somatosensory neuron central targeting. Single cell RNA sequencing of Piezo2 conditional mutants revealed changes in gene expression in the sensory neurons activated by light mechanical forces, whereas other neuronal classes were less affected. To further test the role of activity in mechanosensory end organ development, we genetically deleted the voltage-gated sodium channel Na v 1.6 ( Scn8a ) in somatosensory neurons throughout development and found that Scn8a mutants also have disrupted somatosensory neuron morphologies and altered electrophysiological responses to mechanical stimuli. Together, these findings indicate that mechanically evoked neuronal activity acts early in life to shape the maturation of the mechanosensory end organs that underlie our sense of gentle touch.
Keyphrases
  • single cell
  • gene expression
  • spinal cord
  • transcranial direct current stimulation
  • rna seq
  • dna methylation
  • spinal cord injury
  • high throughput
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • functional connectivity