Studying mice, scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have identified a neural circuit and a neuropeptide — a chemical messenger that carries signals between nerve cells — that transmit the sensation known as pleasant touch from the skin to the brain.
Such touch — delivered by hugs, holding
hands or caressing, for example — triggers a psychological boost known to be
important to emotional well-being and healthy development. Identifying the
neuropeptide and circuit that direct the sensation of pleasant touch eventually
may help scientists better understand and treat disorders characterized by
touch avoidance and impaired social development, including autism spectrum
disorder.
The study is published April 28 in the
journal Science.
“Pleasant touch sensation is very
important in all mammals,” said principal investigator Zhou-Feng Chen, PhD,
director of the Center for the Study of Itch & Sensory Disorders at
Washington University. “A major way babies are nurtured is through touch.
Holding the hand of a dying person is a very powerful, comforting force.
Animals groom each other. People hug and shake hands. Massage therapy reduces
pain and stress and can provide benefits for patients with psychiatric
disorders. In these experiments with mice, we have identified a key
neuropeptide and a hard-wired neural pathway dedicated to this sensation.”
Chen’s team found that when they bred
mice without the neuropeptide, called prokinecticin 2 (PROK2), such mice could
not sense pleasant touch signals but continued to react normally to itchy and
other stimuli.
“This is important because now that we
know which neuropeptide and receptor transmit only pleasant touch sensations,
it may be possible to enhance pleasant touch signals without interfering with
other circuits, which is crucial because pleasant touch boosts several hormones
in the brain that are essential for social interactions and mental health,” he
explained.
Among other findings, Chen’s team
discovered that mice engineered to lack PROK2 or the spinal cord neural circuit
expressing its receptor (PROKR2) also avoided activities such as grooming and
exhibited signs of stress not seen in normal mice. The researchers also found
that mice lacking pleasant touch sensation from birth had more severe stress
responses and exhibited greater social avoidance behavior than mice whose
pleasant touch response was blocked in adulthood. Chen said that finding
underscores the importance of maternal touch in the development of offspring.
“Mothers like to lick their pups, and
adult mice also groom each other frequently, for good reasons, such as helping
emotional bonding, sleep and stress relief,” he said. “But these mice avoid it.
Even when their cagemates try to groom them, they pull away. They don’t groom
other mice either. They are withdrawn and isolated.”
Scientists typically divide the sense of
touch into two parts: discriminative touch and affective touch. Discriminative
touch allows the one being touched to detect that touch and to identify its
location and force. Affective, pleasant or aversive, touch attaches an
emotional value to that touch.
Studying pleasant touch in people is
easy because a person can tell a researcher how a certain type of touch feels.
Mice, on the other hand, can’t do that, so the research team had to figure out
how to get mice to allow themselves to be touched.
“If an animal doesn’t know you, it
usually pulls away from any sort of touch because it can view it as a threat,”
said Chen, the Russell D. and Mary B. Shelden Professor in Anesthesiology and a
professor of psychiatry, of medicine and of developmental biology. “Our
difficult task was to design experiments that helped move past the animals’
instinctual avoidance of touch.”
To get the mice to cooperate — and to
learn whether they experienced touching as pleasant — the researchers kept mice
apart from cagemates for a time, after which the animals were more amenable to
being stroked with a soft brush, similar to pets being petted and groomed.
After several days of such brushing, the mice then were placed into an
environment with two chambers. In one chamber the animals were brushed. In the
other chamber, there was no stimulus of any kind. When given the choice, the
mice went to the chamber where they would be brushed.
Next, Chen’s team began working to
identify the neuropeptides that were activated by pleasant brushing. They found
that PROK2 in sensory neurons and PROKR2 in the spinal cord transmitted
pleasant touch signals to the brain.
In further experiments, they found that the
neuropeptide they had homed in on wasn’t involved in transmitting other sensory
signals, such as itch. Chen, whose laboratory was the first to identify a
similar, dedicated pathway for itch, said pleasant touch sensation is
transmitted by an entirely different, dedicated network.
“Just as we have itch-specific cells and peptides, we now have identified pleasant touch-specific neurons and a peptide to transmit those signals,” he said.
Source: https://medicine.wustl.edu/news/neural-pathway-key-to-sensation-of-pleasant-touch-identified/
Journal article: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abn2479
Source: Neural
pathway key to sensation of pleasant touch identified – Scents of Science
(myfusimotors.com)
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