Wu Yu, Chen Haowen, Guo Liang
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, The Ohio State University Columbus OH USA
RSC Adv. 2019 Dec 24;10(1):187-200. doi: 10.1039/c9ra08917a. eCollection 2019 Dec 20.
Developing electrophysiological platforms to capture electrical activities of neurons and exert modulatory stimuli lays the foundation for many neuroscience-related disciplines, including the neuron-machine interface, neuroprosthesis, and mapping of brain circuitry. Intrinsically more advantageous than genetic and chemical neuronal probes, electrical interfaces directly target the fundamental driving force-transmembrane currents-behind the complicated and diverse neuronal signals, allowing for the discovery of neural computational mechanisms of the most accurate extent. Furthermore, establishing electrical access to neurons is so far the most promising solution to integrate large-scale, high-speed modern electronics with neurons that are highly dynamic and adaptive. Over the evolution of electrode-based electrophysiologies, there has long been a trade-off in terms of precision, invasiveness, and parallel access due to limitations in fabrication techniques and insufficient understanding of membrane-electrode interactions. On the one hand, intracellular platforms based on patch clamps and sharp electrodes suffer from acute cellular damage, fluid diffusion, and labor-intensive micromanipulation, with little room for parallel recordings. On the other hand, conventional extracellular microelectrode arrays cannot detect from subcellular compartments or capture subthreshold membrane potentials because of the large electrode size and poor seal resistance, making it impossible to depict a comprehensive picture of a neuron's electrical activities. Recently, the application of nanotechnology on neuronal electrophysiology has brought about a promising solution to mitigate these conflicts on a single chip. In particular, three dimensional nanostructures of 10-100 nm in diameter are naturally fit to achieve the purpose of precise and localized interrogations. Engineering them into vertical nanoprobes bound on planar substrates resulted in excellent membrane-electrode seals and high-density electrode distribution. There is no doubt that 3D vertical nanoelectrodes have achieved a fundamental milestone in terms of high precision, low invasiveness, and parallel recording at the neuron-electrode interface, albeit with there being substantial engineering issues that remain before the potential of nano neural interfaces can be fully exploited. Within this framework, we review the qualitative breakthroughs and opportunities brought about by 3D vertical nanoelectrodes, and discuss the major limitations of current electrode designs with respect to rational and seamless cell-on-chip systems.
开发能够捕捉神经元电活动并施加调节性刺激的电生理平台,为许多神经科学相关学科奠定了基础,包括神经元 - 机器接口、神经假体以及脑电路图谱绘制。与基因和化学神经元探针相比,电接口本质上更具优势,它直接针对复杂多样的神经元信号背后的基本驱动力——跨膜电流,从而能够在最精确的程度上发现神经计算机制。此外,建立与神经元的电连接是目前将大规模、高速的现代电子设备与高度动态和适应性的神经元集成的最有前景的解决方案。在基于电极的电生理学发展过程中,由于制造技术的限制以及对膜 - 电极相互作用的理解不足,在精度、侵入性和平行接入方面长期存在权衡。一方面,基于膜片钳和尖锐电极的细胞内平台存在急性细胞损伤、液体扩散以及劳动强度大的显微操作问题,且平行记录的空间很小。另一方面,传统的细胞外微电极阵列由于电极尺寸大且密封电阻差,无法从亚细胞区室进行检测或捕捉阈下膜电位,因此无法描绘神经元电活动的全貌。最近,纳米技术在神经元电生理学中的应用为在单个芯片上缓解这些冲突带来了一个有前景的解决方案。特别是,直径为10 - 100纳米的三维纳米结构自然适合实现精确和局部询问的目的。将它们设计成绑定在平面基板上的垂直纳米探针,可实现优异的膜 - 电极密封和高密度电极分布。毫无疑问,三维垂直纳米电极在神经元 - 电极界面的高精度、低侵入性和平行记录方面已经实现了一个基本的里程碑,尽管在充分发挥纳米神经接口的潜力之前,仍有大量工程问题有待解决。在此框架内,我们回顾了三维垂直纳米电极带来的定性突破和机遇,并讨论了当前电极设计在合理且无缝的芯片上细胞系统方面的主要局限性。