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Three-dimensional reconstructions of mechanosensory end organs suggest a unifying mechanism underlying dynamic, light touch

Annie Handler,Qiyu Zhang,Song Pang,Tri M. Nguyen,Michael Iskols,Michael Nolan-Tamariz,Stuart Cattel,Rebecca Plumb, Brianna Sanchez,Karyl Ashjian,Aria Shotland,Bartianna Brown,Madiha Kabeer,Josef Turecek, Michelle M. Delisle, Genelle Rankin, Wangchu Xiang, Elisa C. Pavarino, Nusrat Africawala, Celine Santiago, Wei-Chung Allen, C. Shan Xu, David D. Ginty

Neuron(2023)

Cited 40|Views49
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Abstract
Across mammalian skin, structurally complex and diverse mechanosensory end organs respond to mechan-ical stimuli and enable our perception of dynamic, light touch. How forces act on morphologically dissimilar mechanosensory end organs of the skin to gate the requisite mechanotransduction channel Piezo2 and excite mechanosensory neurons is not understood. Here, we report high-resolution reconstructions of the hair follicle lanceolate complex, Meissner corpuscle, and Pacinian corpuscle and the subcellular distribution of Piezo2 within them. Across all three end organs, Piezo2 is restricted to the sensory axon membrane, including axon protrusions that extend from the axon body. These protrusions, which are numerous and elab-orate extensively within the end organs, tether the axon to resident non-neuronal cells via adherens junctions. These findings support a unified model for dynamic touch in which mechanical stimuli stretch hundreds to thousands of axon protrusions across an end organ, opening proximal, axonal Piezo2 channels and exciting the neuron.
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