Neurosciences PhD Program, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305
School of Medicine, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305.
J Neurosci. 2023 Jun 28;43(26):4808-4820. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1023-22.2023. Epub 2023 Jun 2.
High-fidelity electronic implants can in principle restore the function of neural circuits by precisely activating neurons via extracellular stimulation. However, direct characterization of the individual electrical sensitivity of a large population of target neurons, to precisely control their activity, can be difficult or impossible. A potential solution is to leverage biophysical principles to infer sensitivity to electrical stimulation from features of spontaneous electrical activity, which can be recorded relatively easily. Here, this approach is developed and its potential value for vision restoration is tested quantitatively using large-scale multielectrode stimulation and recording from retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) of male and female macaque monkeys Electrodes recording larger spikes from a given cell exhibited lower stimulation thresholds across cell types, retinas, and eccentricities, with systematic and distinct trends for somas and axons. Thresholds for somatic stimulation increased with distance from the axon initial segment. The dependence of spike probability on injected current was inversely related to threshold, and was substantially steeper for axonal than somatic compartments, which could be identified by their recorded electrical signatures. Dendritic stimulation was largely ineffective for eliciting spikes. These trends were quantitatively reproduced with biophysical simulations. Results from human RGCs were broadly similar. The inference of stimulation sensitivity from recorded electrical features was tested in a data-driven simulation of visual reconstruction, revealing that the approach could significantly improve the function of future high-fidelity retinal implants. This study demonstrates that individual primate retinal ganglion cells of different types respond to artificially generated, external electrical fields in a systematic manner, in accordance with theoretical predictions, that allows for prediction of electrical stimulus sensitivity from recorded spontaneous activity. It also provides evidence that such an approach could be immensely helpful in the calibration of clinical retinal implants.
高保真电子植入物可以通过对神经元进行精确的细胞外刺激来恢复神经回路的功能。然而,要精确地控制它们的活动,直接描述目标神经元的个体电敏感性是困难的,甚至是不可能的。一个潜在的解决方案是利用生物物理原理,从自发电活动的特征推断对电刺激的敏感性,而这些特征可以相对容易地记录下来。在这里,使用来自雄性和雌性猕猴的视网膜神经节细胞(RGC)的大规模多电极刺激和记录,开发了这种方法并对其进行了定量测试,以评估其对视力恢复的潜在价值。从给定细胞记录到更大尖峰的电极在各种细胞类型、视网膜和偏心度中表现出更低的刺激阈值,其具有针对胞体和轴突的系统和独特的趋势。体细胞刺激的阈值随着距离轴突起始段的增加而增加。注入电流引起的尖峰概率与阈值呈反比关系,对于轴突比胞体部分来说,这种关系更为陡峭,通过它们的记录电特征可以识别出这一点。树突刺激对于激发尖峰的效果不大。这些趋势在生物物理模拟中得到了定量重现。人类 RGC 的结果基本相似。从记录的电特征推断刺激敏感性在视觉重建的驱动数据模拟中进行了测试,结果表明该方法可以显著改善未来高保真视网膜植入物的功能。本研究表明,不同类型的灵长类动物的单个视网膜神经节细胞以系统的方式对人工产生的外部电场做出反应,这与理论预测一致,允许从记录的自发活动中预测电刺激敏感性。它还提供了证据表明,这种方法可以在临床视网膜植入物的校准中提供极大的帮助。