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High Density Individually Addressable Nanowire Arrays Record Intracellular Activity from Primary Rodent and Human Stem Cell Derived Neurons

Authors :
Douglas V. Pete
Katherine L. Jungjohann
Yoontae Hwang
Ren Liu
Anthony James
John Nogan
Sang Heon Lee
Yimin Zou
Renjie Chen
Denise B. Webb
Massoud L. Khraiche
Sandy Hinckley
Cesare Soci
Shadi A. Dayeh
Yun Goo Ro
Steven Biesmans
Ahmed T. Elthakeb
Xing Dai
Atsunori Tanaka
Albert K. Matsushita
Deborah Pre
Anne G. Bang
John Henry J. Scott
Source :
Liu, Ren; Chen, Renjie; Elthakeb, Ahmed T; Lee, Sang Heon; Hinckley, Sandy; Khraiche, Massoud L; et al.(2017). High Density Individually Addressable Nanowire Arrays Record Intracellular Activity from Primary Rodent and Human Stem Cell Derived Neurons. Nano Letters, 17(5), 2757-2764. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b04752. UC Office of the President: UC Lab Fees Research Program (LFRP); a funding opportunity through UC Research Initiatives (UCRI). Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/65f7v5gd
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2017.

Abstract

We report a new hybrid integration scheme that offers for the first time a nanowire-on-lead approach, which enables independent electrical addressability, is scalable, and has superior spatial resolution in vertical nanowire arrays. The fabrication of these nanowire arrays is demonstrated to be scalable down to submicrometer site-to-site spacing and can be combined with standard integrated circuit fabrication technologies. We utilize these arrays to perform electrophysiological recordings from mouse and rat primary neurons and human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neurons, which revealed high signal-to-noise ratios and sensitivity to subthreshold postsynaptic potentials (PSPs). We measured electrical activity from rodent neurons from 8 days in vitro (DIV) to 14 DIV and from hiPSC-derived neurons at 6 weeks in vitro post culture with signal amplitudes up to 99 mV. Overall, our platform paves the way for longitudinal electrophysiological experiments on synaptic activity in human iPSC based disease models of neuronal networks, critical for understanding the mechanisms of neurological diseases and for developing drugs to treat them.

Details

ISSN :
15306992 and 15306984
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nano Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd7610ead66854e62e7070753eb86f8f