Pitvipers have a specialized sensory system in the upper jaw to detect
infrared (IR) radiation. The bilateral pit organs resemble simple
pinhole cameras that map IR objects onto the sensory epithelium as
blurred representations of the environment. Trigeminal afferents
transmit information about changing temperature patterns as neuronal
spike discharge in a topographic manner to the hindbrain nucleus of the
lateral descending trigeminal tract (LTTD). A presumed, yet so far
unknown neuronal connectivity within this central nucleus exerts a
synaptic computation that constrains the relatively large receptive
field of primary afferent fibers. Here, we used intracellular recordings
of LTTD neurons in isolated rattlesnake brains to decipher the
spatio-temporal pattern of excitatory and inhibitory responses following
electrical stimulation of single and multiple peripheral pit
organ-innervating nerve branches. The responses of individual neurons
consisted of complex spike sequences that derived from spatially and
temporally specific interactions between excitatory and inhibitory
synaptic inputs from the same as well as from adjacent peripheral nerve
terminal areas. This pattern complies with a central excitation that is
flanked by a delayed lateral inhibition, thereby enhancing the contrast
of IR sensory input, functionally reminiscent of the computations for
contrast enhancement in the peripheral visual system.
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Pitvipers have a specialized sensory system in the upper jaw to detect
infrared (IR) radiation. The bilateral pit organs resemble simple
pinhole cameras that map IR objects onto the sensory epithelium as
blurred representations of the environment. Trigeminal afferents
transmit information about changing temperature patterns as neuronal
spike discharge in a topographic manner to the hindbrain nucleus of the
lateral descending trigeminal tract (LTTD). A presumed, yet so far
unknown neuronal connec...
»