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Spinal Lamina IV Neurons

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cell674 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Spinal Lamina IV Neurons

Overview

Spinal lamina IV neurons are interneuronal populations located within the fourth lamina (layer) of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord, as defined by the Rexed cytoarchitectonic classification system. These neurons occupy a critical intermediate position in the sensory processing hierarchy, receiving input from both primary sensory afferents and descending supraspinal pathways while projecting to deeper laminae and ascending tracts. Lamina IV is characterized by a dense neuropil rich in synaptic terminals and represents a major relay station for the integration of somatosensory information, particularly low-threshold mechanoreceptive signals. The neuronal populations within this lamina are heterogeneous in morphology, neurochemistry, and connectivity, encompassing various subtypes of excitatory and inhibitory interneurons that together coordinate multi-synaptic sensory processing.

Function and Biology

Lamina IV neurons function primarily as second-order sensory neurons (also termed dorsal horn projection neurons or relay neurons) that process and modulate peripheral sensory information before transmitting it to supraspinal centers. The lamina receives substantial input from large-diameter (Aα and Aβ) low-threshold mechanoreceptors carrying innocuous tactile, pressure, and proprioceptive information. These neurons integrate convergent inputs through complex dendritic arbors that may extend rostrocaudally for several spinal segments, allowing for spatial summation of sensory signals across dermatomes.

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