The Sixth Sense
Taste, smell, vision, hearing, touch, and… awareness of one's
body in space? Yes, humans have at least six senses, and a new study suggests
that the last one, called proprioception, may have a genetic basis.
Proprioception
refers to how your brain understands where your body is in space. When the police
ask a drunken person to touch their finger to the tip of their nose, they're
testing the sense of proprioception.
Previous
research in mice has suggested that a gene called PIEZO2 may play a role in
this sense, according to the study. The PIEZO2 gene tells cells to produce
"mechanosensitive" proteins. Mechanosensation is the ability to sense
force, for example, being able to feel when someone presses down on your skin.
It also plays a role in proprioception, according to the study. [7 Weird Facts About Balance]
To
understand the gene's effect in humans, the researchers at the National
Institutes of Health (NIH) identified two young patients who had very rare
mutations in the gene, according to the study, published Wednesday (Sept.
21) in the New England Journal of Medicine.
The patients also had joint problems and scoliosis, the researchers noted.
The
patients were asked to perform several tests related to movement and balance, according
to the study. In one test, for example, the researchers found that the patients
had a great deal of difficulty walking when they were blindfolded.
In another test, the patients were asked to reach for an object
in front of them, first with their eyes open and then while blindfolded.
Compared with people who did not have the gene mutation, the patients had a
much harder time reaching for the object when blindfolded, the researchers
found.
Other tests showed that the blindfolded patients with the gene
mutation had more trouble guessing the direction of movement of their arms and
legs when being moved by the researchers. They also had more trouble feeling
the vibrations from a buzzing tuning fork placed against their skin, compared
with the control participants.
In a different experiment, one patient said that the feeling of
someone gently brushing the skin of the forearm was prickly, as opposed to a
pleasant sensation that's normally reported.
The findings suggest that the patients who carry the mutations
in the PIEZO2 gene are "touch-blind," Alexander Chesler, a principal
investigator at the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health
and the lead author of the study, said in a statement.
"The patient's version of [the gene] PIEZO2 may not work,
so their neurons cannot detect touch or limb movements," Chesler said.
Other
parts of the patients' nervous systems,
however, were working fine, according to the study. The patients could feel
pain, itch, and temperature normally, the researchers said. In addition, their
brains and cognitive abilities were similar to those of the control subjects.
The
researchers said that the PIEZO2 gene has been linked to genetic
musculoskeletal disorders in previous studies. Indeed, the findings of the new
study suggest that the gene may be required for normal skeletal growth and
development, the researchers said. Another possible explanation is that the
sense of touch and proprioception play a role in skeletal development,
they wrote.
Originally published on Live Science.
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