In a
sensory system, a
sensory receptor is a structure that recognizes a
stimulus in the internal or external environment of an
organism. In response to stimuli the sensory receptor initiates
sensory transduction by creating
graded potentials or
action potentials in the same cell or in an adjacent one.
Functions
The
sensory receptors involved in taste and smell contain
receptors that bind to specific chemicals.
Odor receptors in
olfactory receptor neurons, for example, are activated by interacting with molecular structures on the
odor molecule. Similarly,
taste receptors (gustatory receptors) in
taste buds interact with chemicals in food to produce an
action potential.
Other receptors such as mechanoreceptors and photoreceptors respond to physical stimuli. For example, photoreceptor cells contain specialized proteins such as rhodopsin to transduce the physical energy in light into electrical signals. Some types of mechanoreceptors fire action potentials when their membranes are physically stretched.
The sensory receptor functions as the first component in a sensory system.
Sensory receptors respond to specific stimulus modalities. The stimulus modality to which a sensory receptor responds is determined by the sensory receptor's adequate stimulus.
The sensory receptor responds to its stimulus modality by initiating sensory transduction. This may be accomplished by a net shift in the initial states of a receptor(see a picture of these putative states
with the biophysical description - link
).
Classification
by adequate stimulus
A sensory receptor's adequate stimulus is the stimulus modality for which it possesses the adequate
sensory transduction apparatus. Adequate stimulus can be used to classify sensory receptors:
by location
Sensory receptors can be classified by location:
by morphology
Somatic sensory receptors near the surface of the skin can usually be divided into two groups based on morphology:
Innervation
Different sensory receptors are innervated by different types of
nerve fibers. Muscles and associated sensory receptors are innvervated by type I and II sensory fibers, while
cutaneous receptors are innervated by Aβ, Aδ and C fibers.
See also
External links