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High-Density Electrical Recording and Impedance Imaging With a Multi-Modal CMOS Multi-Electrode Array Chip

Multi-electrode arrays, both active or passive, emerged as ideal technologies to unveil intricated electrophysiological dynamics of cells and tissues. Active MEAs, designed using complementary metal oxide semiconductor technology (CMOS), stand over passive devices thanks to the possibility of achiev...

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Autores principales: Miccoli, Beatrice, Lopez, Carolina Mora, Goikoetxea, Erkuden, Putzeys, Jan, Sekeri, Makrina, Krylychkina, Olga, Chang, Shuo-Wen, Firrincieli, Andrea, Andrei, Alexandru, Reumers, Veerle, Braeken, Dries
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6603149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31293372
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00641
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author Miccoli, Beatrice
Lopez, Carolina Mora
Goikoetxea, Erkuden
Putzeys, Jan
Sekeri, Makrina
Krylychkina, Olga
Chang, Shuo-Wen
Firrincieli, Andrea
Andrei, Alexandru
Reumers, Veerle
Braeken, Dries
author_facet Miccoli, Beatrice
Lopez, Carolina Mora
Goikoetxea, Erkuden
Putzeys, Jan
Sekeri, Makrina
Krylychkina, Olga
Chang, Shuo-Wen
Firrincieli, Andrea
Andrei, Alexandru
Reumers, Veerle
Braeken, Dries
author_sort Miccoli, Beatrice
collection PubMed
description Multi-electrode arrays, both active or passive, emerged as ideal technologies to unveil intricated electrophysiological dynamics of cells and tissues. Active MEAs, designed using complementary metal oxide semiconductor technology (CMOS), stand over passive devices thanks to the possibility of achieving single-cell resolution, the reduced electrode size, the reduced crosstalk and the higher functionality and portability. Nevertheless, most of the reported CMOS MEA systems mainly rely on a single operational modality, which strongly hampers the applicability range of a single device. This can be a limiting factor considering that most biological and electrophysiological dynamics are often based on the synergy of multiple and complex mechanisms acting from different angles on the same phenomena. Here, we designed a CMOS MEA chip with 16,384 titanium nitride electrodes, 6 independent operational modalities and 1,024 parallel recording channels for neuro-electrophysiological studies. Sixteen independent active areas are patterned on the chip surface forming a 4 × 4 matrix, each one including 1,024 electrodes. Electrodes of four different sizes are present on the chip surface, ranging from 2.5 × 3.5 μm(2) up to 11 × 11.0 μm(2), with 15 μm pitch. In this paper, we exploited the impedance monitoring and voltage recording modalities not only to monitor the growth and development of primary rat hippocampal neurons, but also to assess their electrophysiological activity over time showing a mean spike amplitude of 144.8 ± 84.6 μV. Fixed frequency (1 kHz) and high sampling rate (30 kHz) impedance measurements were used to evaluate the cellular adhesion and growth on the chip surface. Thanks to the high-density configuration of the electrodes, as well as their dimension and pitch, the chip can appreciate the evolutions of the cell culture morphology starting from the moment of the seeding up to mature culture conditions. The measurements were confirmed by fluorescent staining. The effect of the different electrode sizes on the spike amplitudes and noise were also discussed. The multi-modality of the presented CMOS MEA allows for the simultaneous assessment of different physiological properties of the cultured neurons. Therefore, it can pave the way both to answer complex fundamental neuroscience questions as well as to aid the current drug-development paradigm.
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spelling pubmed-66031492019-07-10 High-Density Electrical Recording and Impedance Imaging With a Multi-Modal CMOS Multi-Electrode Array Chip Miccoli, Beatrice Lopez, Carolina Mora Goikoetxea, Erkuden Putzeys, Jan Sekeri, Makrina Krylychkina, Olga Chang, Shuo-Wen Firrincieli, Andrea Andrei, Alexandru Reumers, Veerle Braeken, Dries Front Neurosci Neuroscience Multi-electrode arrays, both active or passive, emerged as ideal technologies to unveil intricated electrophysiological dynamics of cells and tissues. Active MEAs, designed using complementary metal oxide semiconductor technology (CMOS), stand over passive devices thanks to the possibility of achieving single-cell resolution, the reduced electrode size, the reduced crosstalk and the higher functionality and portability. Nevertheless, most of the reported CMOS MEA systems mainly rely on a single operational modality, which strongly hampers the applicability range of a single device. This can be a limiting factor considering that most biological and electrophysiological dynamics are often based on the synergy of multiple and complex mechanisms acting from different angles on the same phenomena. Here, we designed a CMOS MEA chip with 16,384 titanium nitride electrodes, 6 independent operational modalities and 1,024 parallel recording channels for neuro-electrophysiological studies. Sixteen independent active areas are patterned on the chip surface forming a 4 × 4 matrix, each one including 1,024 electrodes. Electrodes of four different sizes are present on the chip surface, ranging from 2.5 × 3.5 μm(2) up to 11 × 11.0 μm(2), with 15 μm pitch. In this paper, we exploited the impedance monitoring and voltage recording modalities not only to monitor the growth and development of primary rat hippocampal neurons, but also to assess their electrophysiological activity over time showing a mean spike amplitude of 144.8 ± 84.6 μV. Fixed frequency (1 kHz) and high sampling rate (30 kHz) impedance measurements were used to evaluate the cellular adhesion and growth on the chip surface. Thanks to the high-density configuration of the electrodes, as well as their dimension and pitch, the chip can appreciate the evolutions of the cell culture morphology starting from the moment of the seeding up to mature culture conditions. The measurements were confirmed by fluorescent staining. The effect of the different electrode sizes on the spike amplitudes and noise were also discussed. The multi-modality of the presented CMOS MEA allows for the simultaneous assessment of different physiological properties of the cultured neurons. Therefore, it can pave the way both to answer complex fundamental neuroscience questions as well as to aid the current drug-development paradigm. Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-06-25 /pmc/articles/PMC6603149/ /pubmed/31293372 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00641 Text en Copyright © 2019 Miccoli, Lopez, Goikoetxea, Putzeys, Sekeri, Krylychkina, Chang, Firrincieli, Andrei, Reumers and Braeken. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Miccoli, Beatrice
Lopez, Carolina Mora
Goikoetxea, Erkuden
Putzeys, Jan
Sekeri, Makrina
Krylychkina, Olga
Chang, Shuo-Wen
Firrincieli, Andrea
Andrei, Alexandru
Reumers, Veerle
Braeken, Dries
High-Density Electrical Recording and Impedance Imaging With a Multi-Modal CMOS Multi-Electrode Array Chip
title High-Density Electrical Recording and Impedance Imaging With a Multi-Modal CMOS Multi-Electrode Array Chip
title_full High-Density Electrical Recording and Impedance Imaging With a Multi-Modal CMOS Multi-Electrode Array Chip
title_fullStr High-Density Electrical Recording and Impedance Imaging With a Multi-Modal CMOS Multi-Electrode Array Chip
title_full_unstemmed High-Density Electrical Recording and Impedance Imaging With a Multi-Modal CMOS Multi-Electrode Array Chip
title_short High-Density Electrical Recording and Impedance Imaging With a Multi-Modal CMOS Multi-Electrode Array Chip
title_sort high-density electrical recording and impedance imaging with a multi-modal cmos multi-electrode array chip
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6603149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31293372
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2019.00641
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