Pleasure and pain: Tiny worm reveals secret to protecting skin sensations

A tiny roundworm has helped University of Queensland scientists uncover minuscule structures in skin tissue that may protect the body's ability to feel temperature, touch and pain. The research is published in Science Advances.

The research changes a decade of scientific thinking on the way sensory nerve connections remain strong throughout a lifetime.

Dr. Sean Coakley from UQ’s School of Biomedical Sciences said the discovery of an external protective “scaffold” in the skin that surrounds sensory nerves has given a glimpse of how the skin and nervous system work together to protect the cable-like structures which receive and transmit messages back to the brain.

Sign up for Blog Updates