Abstract

The naked mole-rat (Heterocephalus glaber) is a small fossorial rodent with specialized dentition that is reflected by the large cortical area dedicated to representation of the prominent incisors. Due to naked mole-rats’ behavioral reliance on the incisors for digging and for manipulating objects, as well as their ability to move the lower incisors independently, we hypothesized that expanded somatosensory representations of the incisors would be present within the cerebellum in order to accommodate a greater degree of proprioceptive, cutaneous, and periodontal input. Multiunit electrophysiological recordings targeting the ansiform lobule were used to investigate tactile inputs from receptive fields on the entire body with a focus on the incisors. Similar to other rodents, a fractured somatotopy appeared to be present with discrete representations of the same receptive fields repeated within each folium of the cerebellum. These findings confirm the presence of somatosensory inputs to a large area of the naked mole-rat cerebellum with particularly extensive representations of the lower incisors and mystacial vibrissae. We speculate that these extensive inputs facilitate processing of tactile cues as part of a sensorimotor integration network that optimizes how sensory stimuli are acquired through active exploration and in turn adjusts motor outputs (such as independent movement of the lower incisors). These results highlight the diverse sensory specializations and corresponding brain organizational schemes that have evolved in different mammals to facilitate exploration of and interaction with their environment.

Highlights

  • Often overlooked when considering the sense of touch, information from the teeth is of critical importance to survival

  • Multiunit electrophysiological mapping was performed in the cerebellum of eight adult naked mole-rats, with a focus on the ansiform lobule, in order to delineate somatosensory representations

  • INCISOR AND VIBRISSAL REPRESENTATIONS IN THE NAKED MOLE-RAT CEREBELLUM The present study is the first characterization of extensive representations of tactile inputs within the naked mole-rat cerebellum, for the lower incisors and mystacial vibrissae

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Summary

Introduction

Often overlooked when considering the sense of touch, information from the teeth is of critical importance to survival. Nearly half of the length of SI is devoted to the representation of oral structures in squirrel and owl monkeys, including dentition (Jain et al, 2001). These findings appear to extend across primate species upon examination of previous anatomical and physiological data from macaques (Dreyer et al, 1975; Krubitzer et al, 1995; Manger et al, 1996) and owl monkeys (Merzenich et al, 1978; Cusick et al, 1989)

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