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The Journal of Neuroscience, January 15, 2003, 23(2):601-610
Widespread Projections from Myelinated Nociceptors throughout the
Substantia Gelatinosa Provide Novel Insights into Neonatal
Hypersensitivity
C. Jeffery
Woodbury and
H. Richard
Koerber
Department of Neurobiology, University of Pittsburgh School of
Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261
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ABSTRACT |
Skin sensory neurons have long been thought to undergo major
changes in anatomy and physiology over the first few weeks of postnatal
life. Low-threshold mechanoreceptors (LTMRs) are believed to project
extensively throughout superficial dorsal horn laminas initially
and provide the afferent limb for hyperactive nocifensive reflexes.
However, our recent studies revealed that neonatal LTMRs do not project
into "pain-specific" regions; instead, they exhibit adult-like
anatomy shortly after birth. We sought to determine whether the same
might be true for myelinated high-threshold mechanoreceptors (HTMRs).
We used an intact, ex vivo somatosensory system
preparation from neonatal mice to allow intrasomal recording and
neurobiotin labeling of individual sensory neurons characterized via
natural skin stimuli. Neonatal HTMRs displayed a number of key
hallmarks of their adult counterparts; relative to LTMRs, they
exhibited broader, inflected somal spikes and higher mechanical
thresholds and/or responded in an increasingly vigorous manner to
incrementally graded forces in a manner capable of encoding stimulus
intensity. Two types were discerned on the basis of central anatomy:
one subset projected to superficial laminas (I/II); the other gave rise
to diffuse, dorsally recurving collateral arbors extending throughout
the entire dorsal horn (I-V). The latter represent a novel cutaneous
afferent morphology that persists in older animals. These studies
reveal that inputs from myelinated afferents to superficial
pain-specific laminas in neonates arise from HTMRs and not LTMRs as
commonly thought. This frequently overlooked population is in a
position, therefore, to contribute substantially to paradoxical
nocifensive behaviors in neonates and various pain states in adults.
Key words:
pain; development; spinal cord; dorsal horn; lamina
II; skin; sensory; dorsal root ganglia; DRG
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Introduction |
Skin sensory neurons
display a striking diversity of physiological and anatomic properties
that are all tightly correlated with function in adults
(for review, see Scott, 1992 ). Among myelinated afferents, for example,
high-threshold mechanoreceptors (HTMRs, or nociceptors)
exhibit broad somal action potentials with a characteristic inflection
on the falling phase, in marked contrast to the narrow, uninflected
somal spikes of low-threshold mechanoreceptors (LTMRs) (Rose et al.,
1986 ; Koerber et al., 1988 ; Djouhri et al., 1998 ). The central
processes of HTMRs and LTMRs also exhibit generally nonoverlapping
terminations in the dorsal horn (DH), with HTMRs projecting to both
superficial and deeper laminas (i.e., I/IIo and V), whereas LTMRs
terminate deep to superficial laminas (e.g., IIi-V) (for review, see
Fyffe, 1992 ).
This tight correlation among anatomic and physiological properties is
thought to occur over a protracted postnatal period. Thus, although all
major functional classes of skin sensory neurons seem to be present in
newborns (Fitzgerald, 1987 ), characteristic somal spike and peripheral
response properties have been suggested to mature later (Fulton, 1987 ;
Fitzgerald and Fulton, 1992 ; Koltzenburg et al., 1997 ; Mirnics and
Koerber, 1997 ; Ritter et al., 2000 ). Likewise, a significant delay in
the development of central termination patterns among myelinated
afferents has also been suggested. For example, LTMRs are thought to
project inappropriately into superficial "pain-specific" DH laminas
during the first few weeks of postnatal life (Fitzgerald et al., 1994 ;
Coggeshall et al., 1996 ; Mirnics and Koerber, 1997 ) (but see Woodbury
et al., 2000 ), thereby transiently serving as the afferent limb of
hypersensitive nocifensive reflexes (for review, see Fitzgerald and
Jennings, 1999 ).
Recent studies of individual, physiologically identified cutaneous
afferents in newborn mice, however, reveal that this scenario of
delayed maturity does not apply to LTMRs. Indeed, neonatal LTMRs are
essentially miniaturized versions of their adult counterparts: they
arborize in the same regions of the neonatal DH as they do in adults,
exhibit stereotypical (i.e., adult-like) response properties, and
display narrow, uninflected somal spikes (Woodbury et al., 2001 ).
Because the latter findings also contradict the view that broad,
inflected somal spikes represent an immature archetype among skin
sensory neurons, one that is transcended postnatally only by LTMRs (for
review, see Fitzgerald and Fulton, 1992 ; Koerber and Mendell, 1992 ), a
key question is whether broad, inflected somal spikes signify a
nociceptive phenotype in neonates as in adults.
Unlike LTMRs, few studies have been conducted on the spinal
terminations of HTMRs (Light and Perl, 1979 ; Rethelyi et al., 1982 ), and currently nothing is known of their development.
Thus, the present studies examined the postnatal development of
incipient myelinated HTMRs using an ex vivo somatosensory
system preparation in mice, with spinal cord and skin in continuity,
which allows combined analyses of somal spikes, peripheral response
properties, and anatomy of individual afferents. The present data show
that myelinated HTMRs are well developed shortly after birth. Unlike LTMRs, they give rise to widespread projections throughout superficial DH laminas and thus probably serve as the myelinated afferent limb of
nocifensive behaviors.
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Materials and Methods |
The in vitro electrophysiological experiments
described in the present report were conducted on early postnatal mice
(Swiss-Webster strain; Hilltop Farms, Scottdale, PA) ranging in age
from the day of birth [postnatal day 0 (P0)] to P7; experiments were
also conducted on mice older than P7 for comparison. All
procedures used in the present studies were approved by the University
of Pittsburgh Animal Care and Use Committee.
Preparation and recording. The ex vivo cutaneous
somatosensory system preparation used in the present studies was
detailed previously (Woodbury et al., 2001 ). Briefly, neonates at P7 or younger were anesthetized with ice [mice older than P7 were
anesthetized via intramuscular injection of ketamine and xylazine (90 and 10 mg/kg, respectively)]. Anesthetized animals were quickly
decapitated after transcardial perfusion with oxygenated (95%
O2-5% CO2) artificial CSF (aCSF) at 12-15°C in which sodium chloride had been
substituted with sucrose at equivalent osmolarity (in
mM: 253.9 sucrose, 1.9 KCl, 1.2 KH2PO4, 1.3 MgSO4, 2.4 CaCl2, 26.0 NaHCO3, and 10.0 D-glucose). The spinal cord, thoracic and upper
lumbar dorsal root ganglia (DRGs), dorsal cutaneous nerves (DCNs), and
dorsolateral trunk skin on one side were dissected in continuity in a
circulating bath of the same solution. Once isolated, this ex
vivo preparation was transferred to a separate recording chamber
through which chilled oxygenated aCSF, now replenished with sodium
chloride (in mM: 127.0 NaCl, 1.9 KCl, 1.2 KH2PO4, 1.3 MgSO4, 2.4 CaCl2, 26.0 NaHCO3, and 10.0 D-glucose), was circulated. The preparation was
pinned out with the epidermal surface of the skin facing upward, and
the recording bath was raised to 30-31°C for electrophysiological recording.
Individual sensory neuron somata were impaled in the DRGs with glass
microelectrodes (>100 M ) containing 5-20% neurobiotin (Vector
Laboratories, Burlingame, CA) in 1 M potassium acetate. Electrical search stimuli were delivered through a suction electrode on
the nerve to locate afferents with a peripheral process in the DCNs.
Peripheral receptive fields (RFs) were located via gentle stimulation
with a blunt glass stylus, after which calibrated von Frey filaments
were used to characterize the mechanical threshold of the neuron and
its response properties to graded mechanical stimuli (these filaments
provide a discontinuous series of increasing forces and may not reveal
small differences in threshold or sensitivity). Evoked activity was
digitized on tape for subsequent off-line analyses. After physiological
characterization, the cell was stained by injecting neurobiotin
iontophoretically (one per DRG). Peripheral conduction velocity (CV)
was calculated from spike latency and the distance between stimulating
and recording electrodes (measured directly along the nerve).
Afferent identification. The primary goal of these studies
was to examine myelinated afferents falling under the general
definition of HTMRs, i.e., myelinated afferents responding selectively
to tissue-damaging stimulus intensities and those providing an
increasingly vigorous response to increasing stimulus intensities and
thereby capable of warning against potential damage (Burgess and Perl, 1967 ). However, most afferents conduct <1 m/sec at these ages (Woodbury et al., 2001 ). Toward the first goal, because of
changing myelination state during the early postnatal period
(Ziskind-Conhaim, 1988 ) and observed variability in
growth-maturational rate between animals of similar age (a consequence
of differing litter sizes), relative latency measures of individual DCN
afferents were made on a nerve-by-nerve basis. That is, to sample the
broad spectrum of future myelinated afferents, all but the most slowly
conducting group of sensory neurons were targeted in any given nerve.
The latter, constituting the most frequently encountered afferents throughout these experiments, consistently exhibited broad, inflected somal action potentials and, for any given nerve, relatively uniform latencies. Their calculated CVs correlated with the slowest of multiple
peaks seen in a number of compound action potential recordings (data
not shown). Far more definitively, however, many were stained for
independent verification of their identity, and all exhibited highly
stereotypical central terminations indicative of afferents that will
remain unmyelinated (i.e., future C-fiber afferents) (Woodbury et al.,
2001 , their Fig. 7); hence, although the possibility remains that some
of the most slowly conducting future myelinated afferents were missed
by this approach, it is highly probable, particularly in light of
findings from central anatomy (see Results), that all neurons included
in the present study represent future (i.e., incipient) myelinated afferents.
To achieve the second goal, because adult myelinated HTMRs span an
extremely broad spectrum of mechanical thresholds, CVs, adaptation
properties, and somal spike properties (Burgess and Perl, 1967 ; Koerber
et al., 1988 ), no single property in isolation (e.g., mechanical
threshold) can adequately diagnose these afferents in mature animals,
much less among neonates, in which the parameters of these various
properties are currently unknown. Therefore, the approach taken was to
examine afferents satisfying a combination of a number of different
properties that represent key hallmarks of adult myelinated HTMRs.
Because neonatal LTMRs and C-fiber afferents exhibit adult-like somal
spikes (Woodbury et al., 2001 ) and because of the possibility that
mechanical thresholds of HTMRs may be lower in neonates than adults
(Ritter et al., 2000 ), the primary focus was on incipient myelinated
afferents exhibiting (1) inflected somal spikes, (2) slowly adapting
(SA) response properties, (3) elevated mechanical thresholds, and/or
(4) an increasingly vigorous response to increasing forces, as noted for adult HTMRs.
Tissue processing and analysis. Two to 6 hr after
neurobiotin iontophoresis, the spinal cord was immersion fixed [4%
paraformaldehyde in 0.1 M phosphate buffer, pH
7.4 (PB), or 1% paraformaldehyde and 1% glutaraldehyde in PB]
overnight at 4°C. The cord was then blocked, embedded in a 10%
gelatin matrix, postfixed, and cryoprotected in 20% sucrose overnight.
Frozen transverse sections (40-50 µm) were serially collected in PB
and reacted with standard ABC-DAB techniques (Elite kit; Vector
Laboratories) to visualize neurobiotin. Sections were rinsed, mounted
on slides, counterstained with neutral red, dehydrated, cleared, and
coverslipped with Permount (Fisher Scientific).
To be included in the present analyses, multiple darkly stained central
collaterals were required for each afferent. Labeled fibers were
serially reconstructed at 200-1000× and drawn with the aid of a
camera lucida. Photomicrographs of individual arborizations were
obtained using a Dage (Dage-MTI, Michigan City, IN) 3CCD video
camera with a CG-7 capture card (Scion, Frederick, MD). Image
manipulation in Adobe Photoshop (Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA) routinely
included minor adjustments of brightness and contrast to compensate for
variable lighting at the time of image capture. Moreover, because of
the limited depth of field at the higher magnifications needed to
visualize the fine processes of neonatal afferents, multiple images
were captured at different focal planes through individual sections and
successively merged to generate a manually "Z-projected," in-focus
stack as described previously (Woodbury et al., 2001 ). All
photomicrographs in the present report, except that in Figure 5,
represent such composite photomicrographs.
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Results |
The present report is based on observations on the physiology and
central anatomy of 28 well labeled incipient myelinated skin sensory
neurons from neonatal mice aged P1-P7. These 28 afferents represent a
restricted subset of a much larger sample of well stained and
characterized afferents (81 cells from 54 preparations aged P0-P7)
spanning a diverse spectrum of skin sensory neurons from C-fibers with
broad, inflected somal action potentials to multiple subclasses of
LTMRs with narrow, uninflected somal spikes; some of these were
documented in a previous report (Woodbury et al., 2001 ). Importantly,
all of the afferents included here displayed a diverse suite of key
properties of adult myelinated HTMRs, sharing with the latter notable
similarities in somal spike properties, mechanical thresholds,
adaptation rate, increased sensitivity to increasing forces, receptive
field organization, and central anatomy (see below). Because LTMRs are
already well differentiated in terms of both physiology and anatomy at
these same ages (Woodbury et al., 2001 ) (Table
1), the most parsimonious
hypothesis is that this collection of neonatal afferents sharing
multiple properties in common with adult myelinated nociceptors were
indeed incipient myelinated HTMRs, and they are referred to as such in
the following treatment.
Myelinated HTMRs versus LTMRs in neonates
Table 1 presents physiological data for all well stained incipient
myelinated HTMRs from these studies for which spike data were
available; these are compared with similar data from LTMRs across the
same ages, some of which have been detailed previously (Woodbury et
al., 2001 ). All afferents identified as HTMRs in the present study
exhibited inflected somal spikes, and these were significantly greater
in amplitude and duration [both spike and afterhyperpolarization (AHP)
duration, measured at half-amplitude] than the uninflected spikes of
LTMRs across the same ages (p < 0.0001 for all
three comparisons; Mann-Whitney U test); indeed, there was
no overlap in spike half-widths and only minimal overlap in AHP
half-width measurements between these populations. In terms of
peripheral physiology, all of these HTMRs exhibited SA response properties, and all but a distinctive subset (below) gave an
increasingly vigorous response to increasing stimulus intensities; in
contrast, the maximal response of LTMRs to higher forces could be
reproduced with much lower forces. Overall, the mechanical thresholds
of these afferents were significantly higher than those of LTMRs (p < 0.0001; Mann-Whitney U test).
Importantly, the values in Table 1 are artifactually inflated, because
the thresholds of the majority of neonatal LTMRs (18 of 26) were below
the limit of resolution (0.07 mN) of von Frey filaments. Nevertheless,
the remaining LTMRs exhibited thresholds equal to or above the lowest value seen among HTMRs (0.3 mN). Thus, mechanical threshold in isolation could not reliably separate these neonatal populations a
priori; somal spike and physiological response properties were found to
be far more robust predictors of afferent modality.
Across this sample of neonatal HTMRs, there was considerable variation
in conduction velocity, spike width, mechanical threshold, and rate of
adaptation to sustained stimuli, as has been noted in adult HTMRs
(Burgess and Perl, 1967 ; Koerber et al., 1988 ). On the basis of central
anatomy, two subpopulations could be distinguished (Table 1), one
projecting to laminas I and IIo, the other arborizing throughout all DH
laminas. In view of this striking discontinuity, afferents were
subdivided further on morphological grounds to examine the range of
physiological diversity within these subpopulations.
Lamina I/IIo HTMRs
As seen in Figures 1 and
2, the central projections of this
population were centered primarily on the marginal zone. In all, 10 well labeled examples of this class have been recovered from neonates across ages P1 (n = 1), P2 (n = 1), P3 (n = 1), P4 (n = 2), P6
(n = 2), and P7 (n = 3); these were
similar overall to another, albeit less well labeled, afferent from a
P3 neonate. Across incipient myelinated afferents, their peripheral CVs
were relatively slow (Table 1; range, 0.43-0.77 m/sec); among all afferents in any given nerve, their latencies to electrical stimulation were generally intermediate overall, typically twice that of the fastest afferents and at least one-half that of future unmyelinated afferents. Unlike LTMRs across the same ages, all were characterized by
broad somal action potentials with an inflection on the falling phase,
representative examples of which are illustrated in Figures 1 and
2.

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Figure 1.
Central anatomy, physiology, and somatotopic
organization of lamina I/IIo HTMRs in neonates. Photomicrographs of
serial sections through the central arbors of two different HTMRs from
neonates aged P6 (left) and P3 (right).
Note that, although arborizations are centered primarily on lamina I,
processes also extended into deeper laminas. Camera lucida
reconstructions (bottom) and RF locations (mouse
pup schematic) illustrate that the projections of these
afferents are somatotopically appropriate. Physiological records
(center, obtained from the afferent at
left) illustrate the broad inflected somal action
potential and evoked activity to graded forces (durations indicated by
solid bars). Note that the response adapted rapidly in
many cases and became saturated at relatively low stimulus intensities.
Note also the pronounced activity-induced hyperpolarization.
Bottom trace shows the entire recording of this neuron,
in which this hyperpolarization is readily apparent. E,
Electrical nerve stimuli; GS, gentle probing with blunt
glass stylus; vF, testing with incrementally graded von
Frey filaments. Thresholds and CVs, respectively, were 2.5 mN and 0.56 m/sec (left) and 0.3 mN and 0.53 m/sec
(right). Scale bars: photomicrographs, 25 µm ; camera
lucida reconstructions, 100 µm. Calibration: 10 mV, 5 msec (spike),
200 msec (naturally evoked responses), and 20 sec (complete
trace).
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Figure 2.
Diversity of central collateral morphology among
lamina I/IIo HTMRs. Camera lucida reconstructions of the collateral
arbors from HTMRs in neonates aged P1 (A) and P2
(B). Note that, although these collaterals were
oriented primarily in the horizontal plane parallel to the marginal
zone, they also extend to variable depths into deeper laminas. The
central axons of most lamina I/IIo HTMRs remained laterally as in
A, although some coursed in the dorsal column as
shown in B. Spike traces and derivatives reveal the
broad inflected somal action potentials typical for these afferents.
Naturally evoked SA response to a sustained stimulus (2.5 mN, duration
indicated by the solid bar). CVs were 0.43 m/sec
(A) and 0.40 m/sec (B).
Threshold for A was 0.7 mN; RF for B
could not be located, although another lamina I/IIo HTMR with identical
morphology and somal spike had a threshold of 2.5 mN and
response properties similar to those in A. Scale bars, 100 µm. Calibration: 20 mV, 5 msec (spike), 250 msec (naturally evoked
response).
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Peripheral physiology
RFs of these afferents were typically small (~1
mm2) and spot-like; occasionally, multiple
sensitive foci separated by regions of lower sensitivity could be
discerned. Included in this population were afferents exhibiting the
highest mechanical thresholds seen among neonatal afferents (Table 1;
range, 0.3-7.8 mN), significantly above those of different populations
of LTMRs across the same ages (p < 0.001;
Mann-Whitney U test).
Despite their generally elevated mechanical thresholds, these afferents
were very responsive to skin stimulation when first encountered. For
example, gentle probing with a blunt glass stylus was sufficient to
locate the RFs of all but one afferent (Fig. 2B),
whose RF could not be found (see caveats by Woodbury et al., 2001 ).
Although SA responses could normally be elicited in these afferents
using suprathreshold von Frey filaments, the typical response to the
latter was a burst of spikes that tended to adapt out fairly rapidly to
maintained stimuli. Furthermore, maximal responses were often obtained
at relatively low von Frey forces (Fig. 1), such that a number of these
afferents failed to respond to increasing stimulus intensities with
incrementally graded activity. Rather, they tended to habituate and/or
desensitize to repetitive stimulation, with some rendered completely
inexcitable by an intense stimulus. In a few cases, activity could
again be elicited by stimulation at a different spot. It should be
noted that these afferents invariably responded far more vigorously to
a sharp object (e.g., number 5 forceps) than to blunt von Frey
filaments, although the former were generally avoided in view of
the above physiological consequences and lack of force control.
Interestingly, repetitive stimulation gave rise to a pronounced,
long-lasting hyperpolarization in many of these afferents. This is
evident in both the fast and slow sweep speeds in Figure 1. As seen
there, even relatively low-frequency (i.e., 0.5 Hz) electrical nerve
stimuli led to a progressive hyperpolarization (Fig. 1, E),
although this membrane effect was greatest when spikes followed in rapid succession (e.g., during natural stimulation) (Fig.
1, GS, vF). Although a similar membrane
effect was also seen in other HTMRs (see Fig. 4), it was most
pronounced in this subpopulation; its potential functional significance
and underlying cause(s) will be discussed elsewhere.
Central anatomy
As noted above, the central projections of these afferents were
centered primarily on laminas I and IIo and thus closely approximated the morphology of a distinctive subset of adult thinly myelinated HTMRs
(Light and Perl, 1979 ). The range of central anatomic variation seen
among neonatal afferents of this type, the earliest from a P1 neonate,
is illustrated by the examples shown in Figures 1 and 2. On entry into
the cord, their axons bifurcated to give rise to ascending and
descending axons that could normally be traced over multiple segments.
A small number of these afferents gave rise to axons ascending in the
dorsal column (Fig. 2B); however, the majority
remained lateral after entry into the cord, ascending in the vicinity
of Lissauer's tract or even farther laterally in the thin veil of
white matter overlying the dorsolateral edge of the DH.
Regardless of the location of their ascending-descending axons, all of
these afferents arborized in a relatively tight plexus conforming to
the outline of lamina I. Altogether, they gave rise to extremely fine
central processes that exhibited a complex branching pattern in the
cord. The greatest density of collateral arbors was seen nearest the
dorsal root entry zone, and, as illustrated in Figure 1, this primary
projection was located in somatotopically appropriate locations across
the mediolateral axis of the DH. The RF of the afferent to the
left in Figure 1 was located near the dorsal midline, and
its central arbors were located at the lateral edge of the marginal
zone; to reach this lateral position, collaterals followed long curving
arcs through the transverse plane of lamina I in a manner mirroring the
classic central anatomy of these afferents (Light and Perl, 1979 ). In
contrast, the RF of the afferent to the right in Figure 1
was near the ventral edge of the DCN innervation territory, and its
projections were located medially within the projection zone of the
DCN. In large part, therefore, this population of afferents exhibited a
somatotopic organization similar to that seen among LTMRs (Woodbury et
al., 2001 ). In contrast to the latter, however, the somatotopy in the mediolateral axis among these afferents appeared relatively coarse, because many gave rise to one or more collaterals that arborized in a
mediolateral location outside the primary projection (Fig. 2).
Although the bulk of the arborization was centered on lamina I, all
gave rise to a diffuse meshwork of processes deep to the marginal
layer, the extent of which varied not only between afferents but also
between collaterals from a single afferent. All projected extensively
into the outer half of the incipient substantia gelatinosa (i.e.,
lamina IIo), in which they would clearly overlap with unmyelinated inputs. The majority also gave rise to small numbers of processes coursing throughout deeper regions of the DH occupied by the collateral arbors of low-threshold afferents (Figs. 1, 2). Hence, the central projections of myelinated HTMRs invade regions occupied by both unmyelinated and tactile afferents in early postnatal life; as seen
below, this was also the case for other myelinated afferents encoding
stimulus intensity.
Lamina I-V HTMRs
Over the course of early experiments aimed at sampling the broad
spectrum of skin sensory neurons in neonates, incipient myelinated HTMRs exhibiting a distinctly novel central morphology were
encountered, and later experiments attempted to target this group
selectively. In all, a total of 18 well labeled and characterized
examples have been recovered from neonates across ages P2
(n = 1), P3 (n = 4), P4
(n = 9), P5 (n = 2), P6
(n = 1), and P7 (n = 1); these were
similar anatomically to two additional well stained afferents from a P3
and a P5 neonate for which RFs could not be found.
Overall, this sample was characterized by a broad range of CVs
(0.35-0.97 m/sec) (Table 1). Although only slightly above lamina I/IIo
HTMRs on average (p = 0.2; Mann-Whitney
U test), the CVs of some overlapped with future
large-diameter (A ) LTMRs at these same ages (e.g., guard hair and
touch dome afferents). As with lamina I/IIo HTMRs, all exhibited
relatively large-amplitude (>50 mV), inflected somal spikes, although
greater variation in spike and AHP duration was seen in this group. A
small number exhibited broad spikes that were indistinguishable from
those of lamina I/IIo HTMRs. On average, however, these spikes were significantly narrower (range, 1.1-3.0 msec) than those of lamina I/IIo HTMRs (range, 2.1-4.2 msec; p = 0.02;
Mann-Whitney U test) but were nevertheless significantly
broader than LTMRs at the same ages (Table 1) (p < 0.001; Mann-Whitney U test). In the narrowest spikes
(also among the fastest conducting), only a slight inflection could be
discerned. On close inspection, however, an inflection marked by an
~45° break in the derivative was apparent throughout. Importantly,
even the narrowest spikes among these did not overlap in spike width
with the broadest LTMR spikes; an example comparing the two from the
same animal is illustrated in Figure 5 (see also Fig. 6).
Interestingly, nearly identical narrow spikes have been observed in
A HTMRs from adult mice (data not shown), which are clearly narrower
than the spikes of A HTMRs (Koerber et al., 1988 ).
Peripheral physiology
As with spike duration, this group of afferents constituted
an intermediate population in terms of mechanical threshold.
Although all were equal to or above the minimum threshold observed
among lamina I/IIo HTMRs, thresholds tended to be lower in this group (Table 1) (range, 0.3-5.6 mN; p = 0.09;
Mann-Whitney U test). Nevertheless, thresholds were
significantly higher overall than those of LTMRs across these same ages
(Table 1) (p < 0.001; Mann-Whitney U test).
Unlike many lamina I/IIo HTMRs (above), all of these afferents
responded with increasing discharge to increasing forces. However, there were notable differences in sensitivity within this group, and
two basic types of response were observed
overall, as illustrated in Figures 3 and
4. Many gave rise to a sluggish, fairly
rapidly adapting (RA) response typical of lamina I/IIo HTMRs (Fig. 3). In contrast, others were relatively sensitive and more slowly adapting
(Fig. 4). Interestingly, a few among these responded phasically to
stimulation over a large (>2 mm2),
ill-defined area. However, careful probing revealed a much smaller
region of heightened sensitivity in which suprathreshold stimuli
elicited a fairly regular response that became increasingly vigorous at
higher forces (Fig. 4). The relatively low thresholds and increasingly
vigorous responses at higher forces imparted a wide dynamic range to
many of these afferents. None exhibited resting background activity
despite the skin being stretched slightly and pinned flat, and none
specifically tested gave any response to dorsoventral or rostrocaudal
skin stretch. As with lamina I/IIo HTMRs, multiple spots of heightened
sensitivity could be discerned on occasion within the RFs of these
more sensitive HTMRs. Interestingly, similar RF properties, including
some with an ill-defined RA "surround," have been seen among A
HTMRs recorded in an identical adult preparation (data not shown).
These more sensitive afferents may correspond to the generally
overlooked "moderate pressure" receptors identified in seminal
studies of myelinated nociceptors (Burgess and Perl, 1967 ; Perl, 1968 ),
many of which conduct in the A range (Burgess and Perl, 1967 ;
Koerber et al., 1988 ).

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Figure 3.
Serial photomicrographs of a collateral
arborization from a lamina I-V HTMR from a P5 neonate. Note the
dorsally recurving flame-shaped appearance of this arbor, which
extended diffusely throughout all laminas into the marginal zone.
Although the spike was narrower than those of lamina I/IIo HTMRs
(compare Figs. 1, 2), the peripheral response properties of this
afferent were nearly indistinguishable, with the exception that these
afferents were better able to encode stimulus intensity. Threshold and
CV were 0.3 mN and 0.46 m/sec, respectively. Scale bar, 50 µm.
Calibration: 20 mV, 5 msec (spike), 200 msec (evoked response
raster).
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Figure 4.
Central projections of a lamina I-V HTMR from a
P6 neonate. Photomicrographs show serial sections through the arbors of
three separate collaterals (rostrocaudal from top left
to bottom right). Note the diffuse network of processes
throughout the entire DH, exemplified in camera lucida reconstruction
(center). Note also that the narrow, slightly inflected
somal spike was nearly identical to that of the afferent shown in
Figure 3. Evoked activity traces (bottom) show that the
fairly regular response of these afferents to incrementally graded
forces became increasingly vigorous at higher forces. Threshold and CV
were 2.5 mN and 0.66 m/sec. Scale bars: photomicrographs, 50 µm;
camera lucida, 100 µm. Calibration: 10 mV, 5 msec (spike), 200 msec
(naturally evoked responses).
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Central anatomy
In contrast to the majority of lamina I/IIo HTMRs whose
longitudinal axons remained laterally (above), the central axons from all of these afferents ascended and descended in the dorsal column. As
exemplified in Figures 3 and 4, considerable diversity in collateral morphology was seen among this group. Collateral processes ranged in
size from extremely fine to relatively coarse. Collaterals curved
laterally after penetrating the gray matter to arborize within
somatotopically appropriate areas; many were reminiscent of the
dorsally recurving "flame-shaped" arbors often identified with hair
follicle afferents (compare Figs. 3, 5).
In marked contrast to LTMRs, however, the arbors of this group extended
throughout both deep and superficial DH regions, including the outer
substantia gelatinosa and marginal zone. Although a small number of
these afferents gave rise to relatively minor projections to lamina I,
most gave rise to large numbers of processes in this outer later. On
reaching the latter, processes typically altered their trajectory to
continue horizontally along either transverse or rostrocaudal axes
while arborizing further (Fig. 4). Moreover, they formed a
characteristically diffuse, reticular meshwork of processes extending
evenly throughout all laminas. Most were relatively expansive across
the mediolateral axis; in one, a single collateral branched repeatedly
across deeper DH to give rise to three or four mediolaterally separate
flame-shaped arbors, as noted in Golgi studies (Scheibel and Scheibel,
1968 ). Extremely fine en passant varicosities were scattered
along processes as they passed throughout all laminas. The
characteristically diffuse nature of these arbors, in contrast to a
typical LTMR arbor, is exemplified in Figure 5.

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Figure 5.
Differences between LTMRs and lamina I-V HTMRs in
neonates. A, Photomicrograph of the DH arborizations of
a hair follicle afferent (open arrows) and a myelinated
HTMR (arrowheads) in a single section from a P5 neonate.
Afferents were injected in adjacent DRGs and fully reconstructed to
identify their central processes in regions of overlap; the location of
the RF of the more laterally projecting LTMR was dorsal to that of the
HTMR. Note the dense arborization of the LTMR and its depth from the
gray-white border (dotted line) as noted previously
(Woodbury et al., 2001 ). In contrast, the central arbors of the HTMR
spread diffusely over a broader area throughout the entire DH; its
recurving collateral axons (asterisk) can be seen
paralleling the larger axon of the LTMR. B, Somal action
potential traces and derivatives from these same afferents. Note that,
relative to the somal spike of the LTMR (left), the HTMR
spike has a distinct inflection on the falling limb
(arrow in derivative trace); it is also greater in
amplitude and duration, readily apparent when these spikes are
superimposed (right). Mechanical thresholds were
<0.07 and 2.5 mN for the LTMR and HTMR, respectively; the LTMR was
typically rapidly adapting, whereas the HTMR gave a slowly adapting
response to forces >5 mN. DR, Dorsal root. Scale bar,
50 µm. Calibration: 20 mV, 5 msec.
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Despite the morphological diversity among these arbors, no consistent
physiological correlates could be detected. Thus, afferents exhibiting
broad spikes and a sluggish, fairly rapidly adapting response in the
manner of lamina I/IIo HTMRs could be either flame-shaped with
relatively minor projections into lamina I or far more mediolaterally expansive with large numbers of processes in lamina I. Similar diversity was also evident across the more sensitive, slowly adapting group. Indeed, the collaterals of some afferents displayed both extremes, and thus this apparent diversity may represent a
morphological continuum.
Postnatal fate
In light of the results of cholera toxin bulk-transport studies
(Fitzgerald et al., 1994 ), it might be predicted that these distinctive
myelinated HTMR arborizations throughout the entire DH represent a
transient developmental phenotype, particularly because adult
bulk-labeling patterns showing a lack of myelinated inputs in
superficial pain-specific dorsal horn laminas (I/IIo) are achieved by
the end of the second postnatal week (but see Woodbury et al., 2000 ).
As seen in Figure 6, however, preliminary studies reveal that the arbors of these afferents are still present in
superficial DH laminas at 3 weeks of age. This afferent displayed no
obvious signs of regression (e.g., retraction bulbs) and indeed supported multiple collaterals with robust arbors similar to the two
different ones represented in Figure 6, A and B.
This raises the intriguing possibility that these extensive projections
remain into adulthood, although they may not be obvious in
bulk-labeling studies.

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Figure 6.
Central projections of a lamina I-V HTMR from a
3-week-old mouse. A, Photomicrograph of the arborization
in a single section; dotted lines indicate boundaries of
laminas I/II. B, Camera lucida reconstruction of a
different collateral arbor. C, Narrow, slightly
inflected spike of this afferent, shown at expanded scale in
D; arrows mark the break in the
derivative. E, The spike from this P21 afferent is shown
superimposed on spikes from two other sensitive lamina I-V HTMRs,
recorded in P2 and P8 neonates; note the close match in spike and AHP
width. F, This same P21 spike is shown superimposed on
the even narrower spike of an LTMR recorded in a P1 neonate. Scale bar,
50 µm. Calibration: 20 mV, 5 msec (except D, which is
2.5 msec).
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Figure 6C-F also reveals that the narrow somal spikes of
these sensitive HTMRs seem to show little change in width postnatally. In Figure 6E, this somal spike from a 3-week-old
mouse is shown superimposed on the spikes from two other HTMRs with
essentially identical peripheral response properties and mechanical
thresholds, one recorded from a P2 neonate and the other at P8.
Importantly, these two neonatal spikes were the narrowest among the
entire sample of neonatal HTMRs yet are essentially identical to the spike from this 3-week-old mouse. Conversely, even after 3 weeks, this
narrow HTMR spike is still broader than that from a P1 LTMR (Fig.
6F). Although certain alterations in somal spike
properties are likely to occur postnatally (Fitzgerald and Fulton,
1992 ), the present findings suggest that, to understand these changes fully, it will be important to confine comparisons within discrete subsets of identified afferents.
 |
Discussion |
The present report describes the central morphology of single,
physiologically characterized, incipient myelinated HTMRs in neonatal
mice. As with recent studies on neonatal LTMRs (Woodbury et al., 2001 ),
these studies used an intact, ex vivo somatosensory system
preparation to allow intrasomal physiological characterization and
staining of individual cutaneous afferents. The resulting suite of
diverse physiological and anatomic data allowed a comprehensive, "total-evidence" approach to the identification and analyses of individual developing neurons. Relative to LTMRs at these same ages,
the afferents included here exhibited higher mechanical thresholds and
responded to incrementally graded forces with an increasingly vigorous,
slowly adapting discharge. They also exhibited relatively broad somal
spikes with an inflection on the falling phase. These data, taken in
combination, suggest that these afferents were indeed developing
HTMRs. As in adults, these neonatal HTMRs exhibited
considerable diversity across a variety of physiological parameters.
Anatomically, two central phenotypes were evident, both of which
projected into the substantia gelatinosa and marginal layer, in which
they would overlap extensively with unmyelinated afferent inputs. In
nearly all respects, these afferents, like neonatal LTMRs, were simply
miniaturized versions of their adult counterparts. These findings shed
new light on wide-ranging issues, from the acquisition of physiological
identity to the development and functional organization of spinal pain centers.
Adult-like physiological properties among sensory neurons in early
postnatal life
Somal spike shape
The present studies of myelinated HTMRs in neonatal mice, in
conjunction with findings from diverse subpopulations of LTMRs over the
same time period (Woodbury et al., 2001 ), represent the earliest
intracellular recordings to date of somal action potentials from
identified cutaneous primary afferents. Combined, these studies reveal
that somal spikes are adult-like in all major respects shortly after
birth (in contrast to Fulton, 1987 ; Fitzgerald and Fulton, 1992 ). That
is, myelinated LTMRs exhibit narrow, uninflected somal spikes,
myelinated HTMRs exhibit inflected spikes ranging from broad to
relatively narrow, and unmyelinated (C) afferents exhibit broad,
inflected somal spikes in newborns as in adults (Rose et al., 1986 ;
Koerber et al., 1988 ; Ritter and Mendell, 1992 ; Djouhri et al.,
1998 ).
The developmental time point at which these stereotypical somal spike
properties are acquired is not known, although there is evidence to
suggest that it occurs very early in embryonic life. In embryonic rat
DRG neurons, for example, narrow (i.e., adult-like) uninflected spikes
(Mirnics and Koerber, 1997 ) and adult-like expression patterns of
TTX-sensitive and TTX-insensitive sodium currents (Ogata and
Tatebayashi, 1992 ) are already in place by embryonic day 17 (the
earliest time point studied). Moreover, in Xenopus tadpoles,
in which the earliest in situ recordings from DRG neurons
have been obtained, a remarkable diversity of somal action potentials,
including large numbers of narrow uninflected TTX-sensitive spikes, is
in evidence from the earliest time point onward (Baccaglini, 1978 ). The
intriguing possibility that primary afferent physiology may be
predetermined seems to have a molecular parallel (Rifkin et al., 2000 )
and clearly warrants additional investigation.
Primary afferent diversity
Along with adult-like somal spikes, these studies found that the
skin of newborn mice is innervated by a diverse functional array of
myelinated afferents, including multiple subclasses of LTMRs (Woodbury
et al., 2001 ) and HTMRs (present study) that are in all major
physiological respects identical to their adult counterparts. This
finding is in accord, therefore, with the pioneering studies of
Fitzgerald (1987) in neonatal rat and stands in contrast to an early
report from the present laboratory (Ritter et al., 2000 ) in which a
significant selection bias against LTMRs (Djouhri and Lawson, 2001 ; Woodbury et al., 2001 ) was compounded by the
small sample size. Interestingly, most anatomically verified
HTMRs in the present study were overtly similar in mechanical
thresholds and response properties to units that composed a transient
"pressure" category in earlier extracellular studies (Fitzgerald,
1987 ). For example, the physiological properties ascribed to "RA
pressure" units were commonly observed among lamina I/IIo HTMRs,
whereas those ascribed to "SA pressure" units were common among
lamina I-V HTMRs (HTMRs in this earlier study, in contrast, may
have represented predominantly unmyelinated HTMRs) (Fitzgerald, 1987 , her Fig. 1). It is noteworthy, however, that considerable
physiological overlap was seen between these two anatomic
subpopulations. For example, many lamina I-V HTMRs displayed somal
spikes and peripheral response properties that were outwardly identical
to those seen among lamina I/IIo HTMRs; hence, these two populations
could not be reliably differentiated a priori with the manual
techniques used. It is possible that distinct physiological differences
may be revealed between these neonatal populations through the
application of true (i.e., feedback-controlled) constant-force stimuli.
Alternatively, physiological differences may emerge at later time
points, possibly via a shift toward higher mechanical thresholds among
certain subsets. Although the range of mechanical thresholds across
these neonatal HTMRs was remarkably similar to that observed to date across HTMRs (both A and A ) in an identical adult preparation (data not shown), not all of the latter have been identified centrally; thus, future comparisons confined within anatomically defined subpopulations will be necessary to elucidate the ontogeny of mechanical thresholds among HTMRs.
Myelinated HTMRs project throughout the substantia gelatinosa
The present finding of two basic morphological phenotypes among
cutaneous myelinated HTMRs in neonatal mice confirms initial studies of
the spinal projections of these afferents in adult cats and primates
(Light and Perl, 1979 ; Rethelyi et al., 1982 ; Traub and Mendell, 1988 ).
One neonatal population, exhibiting the highest mechanical thresholds,
mirrored the central morphology of a distinctive subset of adult thinly
myelinated (A ) HTMRs that contribute to Lissaur's tract and
terminate in the marginal zone, noted in studies of both cutaneous
(Light and Perl, 1979 ; Hayashi, 1985 ) and deep tissue
nociceptors (Hoheisel et al., 1989 ). These may correspond to the
"specific nociceptors" identified in early studies (Burgess and
Perl, 1967 ; Perl, 1968 ). However, in addition to a predominant
projection to lamina I and additional inputs to IIo as noted in adults,
these neonatal lamina I/IIo HTMRs also sent sparse projections into
deeper laminas. The other population differed dramatically from this
classic phenotype, with axons in the dorsal columns and recurrent,
often flame-shaped collateral arbors forming a diffuse, reticular
meshwork throughout all DH laminas. This latter population was
physiologically diverse and may therefore encompass the two other
subcategories of HTMRs identified originally (low-sensitivity
mechanoreceptors and moderate-pressure afferents) (Burgess and Perl,
1967 ; Perl, 1968 ).
The extent to which these widespread central projections from neonatal
HTMRs represent a transitory "exuberance" is not clear at present.
Part of this uncertainty stems from possible species variability. For
example, HTMRs are more extensive centrally in monkeys than in cats,
projecting throughout lamina IV as well as laminas I and V (Rethelyi et
al., 1982 ). That the full spectrum of anatomic diversity among HTMRs is
not yet adequately understood is also reflected in the fact that
cutaneous moderate-pressure units (Burgess and Perl, 1967 ) have not yet
been characterized centrally in adults. Nevertheless, preliminary
findings that these extensive projections still remain in 3-week-old
mice (Fig. 6), at a time when bulk-transport studies indicate otherwise
(Fitzgerald et al., 1994 ; Woodbury et al., 2000 ), suggest that such
inputs from myelinated afferents to the substantia gelatinosa may
remain throughout life. Their characteristically diffuse nature,
particularly when contrasted against the dense arbors of LTMRs (Fig.
5), may account for the apparent inability of bulk-labeling methods to reveal these inputs in adults under normal conditions (Woolf et al.,
1992 ) (but see Tong et al., 1999 ; Woodbury et al., 2000 for nonrodents). It is important to note that, although this unique fibroarchitecture may persist, reorganization of myelinated inputs in
the substantia gelatinosa appears to continue well beyond 3 weeks of
age (Park et al., 1999 ; Nakatsuka et al., 2000 ), and thus the synaptic
efficacy and/or connectivity of these inputs may be quite plastic.
Neonatal pain
These findings, in conjunction with recent studies of neonatal
LTMRs (Woodbury et al., 2001 ), shed important new light on the
development of spinal pathways underlying nocifensive behaviors. They
reveal that inputs into nocireceptive DH regions from myelinated afferents in neonates arise from afferents that encode stimulus intensity (i.e., nociceptors) and not LTMRs. It is well documented that
protective withdrawal reflexes exhibit marked hypersensitivity in
neonatal mammals (for review, see Fitzgerald and Jennings, 1999 ), with
adult-like withdrawal reflex patterns attained at ~3 weeks of age
(Holmberg and Schouenborg, 1996 ). Interestingly, activation of these
reflexes in adults requires stimulation of SA (but not RA) afferents,
and removal of descending inhibition reveals that their thresholds are
relatively low (Weng and Schouenborg, 1998 ). In view of their
peripheral physiology and central anatomy, HTMRs are not only in a
position to play a prominent role in the afferent limb of these
reflexes during normal postnatal development but also represent
intuitive candidates from a functional perspective. The postnatal
decrease in hypersensitivity may reflect predominantly functional
maturation of descending inhibitory inputs (Fitzgerald and Koltzenburg,
1986 ), although possible alterations in the peripheral sensitivity
and/or synaptic efficacy of one or more subsets of myelinated HTMRs may
also play a role.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Aug. 26, 2002; revised Oct. 23, 2002; accepted Oct. 24, 2002.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant NS23725
(H.R.K.). C.J.W. was supported by National Institutes of Health
Grant NS44094. We thank Dr. Amy M. Ritter for helpful suggestions,
Corinne Batchelor, Julie Kopczak, and Weiwen Wang for excellent
technical assistance, and Dr. Brian M. Davis and two anonymous
reviewers for constructive comments on an earlier version of this manuscript.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. C. Jeffery
Woodbury, Department of Neurobiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, W1413 Biomedical Science Tower, Pittsburgh, PA
15261. E-mail: woodbury+{at}pitt.edu.
 |
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