The Sensory Coding of Warm Perception

Neuron. 2020 Jun 3;106(5):830-841.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2020.02.035. Epub 2020 Mar 23.

Abstract

Humans detect skin temperature changes that are perceived as warm or cool. Like humans, mice report forepaw skin warming with perceptual thresholds of less than 1°C and do not confuse warm with cool. We identify two populations of polymodal C-fibers that signal warm. Warm excites one population, whereas it suppresses the ongoing cool-driven firing of the other. In the absence of the thermosensitive TRPM2 or TRPV1 ion channels, warm perception was blunted, but not abolished. In addition, trpv1:trpa1:trpm3-/- triple-mutant mice that cannot sense noxious heat detected skin warming, albeit with reduced sensitivity. In contrast, loss or local pharmacological silencing of the cool-driven TRPM8 channel abolished the ability to detect warm. Our data are not reconcilable with a labeled line model for warm perception, with receptors firing only in response to warm stimuli, but instead support a conserved dual sensory model to unambiguously detect skin warming in vertebrates.

Keywords: C-fiber; Trp channels; nociception; perception; polymodal; sensory coding; thermal transduction; warm.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Mice
  • Mice, Knockout
  • Mutation
  • Nerve Fibers, Unmyelinated / physiology*
  • Nociception / physiology*
  • Perception / physiology*
  • Sensory Thresholds
  • TRPM Cation Channels / genetics*
  • TRPV Cation Channels / genetics*
  • Thermosensing / genetics*
  • Thermosensing / physiology
  • Upper Extremity

Substances

  • TRPM Cation Channels
  • TRPM2 protein, mouse
  • TRPM8 protein, mouse
  • TRPV Cation Channels
  • TRPV1 protein, mouse