Pit vipers detect infrared (IR) radiation with loreal pit organs [1]
that are connected to the hindbrain by trigeminal nerve fibers [2-4].
The pattern of central afferent termination forms a topographical
representation of the sensory periphery within the nucleus of the
lateral descending trigeminal tract (LTTD) [4-7]. All LTTD neurons
project to another specialized, ipsilateral hindbrain area, the nucleus
reticularis caloris (RC) [8-11], before IR signals are integrated with
vi- sual signals in the optic tectum [12, 13]. Pit-organ-innervating
afferent fibers provoke in individual LTTD neurons a direct, robust
spike activity upon pe- ripheral activation [7,14]. This discharge is
truncated by an indirect, delayed synaptic inhibition from afferent
fibers of adjacent sensory areas through parallel microcircuitry that
converges with afferent fibers onto the same target neurons [7]. Here,
we determined the impact of this interaction on IR contrast enhancement
and/or motion detection in LTTD and RC neurons using isolated
whole-brain preparations of rattlesnakes with intact pit organs.
Simulated and real IR source motion provoked weak directional tuning of
the discharge in LTTD neurons and RC neurons expressed a strong,
motion-direction-differentiating activity. The hierarchically increasing
motion sensitivity potentially derives from a direction-specific
inhibition or spike frequency adaptation of LTTD neuronal discharge that
becomes further pronounced by convergent projections onto individual RC
neurons. The emerging signaling pattern complies with contrast
enhancement (LTTD) and extraction of movement-related signals (RC),
thereby forming a motion detection mechanism that encodes moving IR
sources relative to the ambient temperature [14].
«
Pit vipers detect infrared (IR) radiation with loreal pit organs [1]
that are connected to the hindbrain by trigeminal nerve fibers [2-4].
The pattern of central afferent termination forms a topographical
representation of the sensory periphery within the nucleus of the
lateral descending trigeminal tract (LTTD) [4-7]. All LTTD neurons
project to another specialized, ipsilateral hindbrain area, the nucleus
reticularis caloris (RC) [8-11], before IR signals are integrated with
vi- sual signals in...
»