Literature DB >> 17097869

Single-chip microelectronic system to interface with living cells.

F Heer1, S Hafizovic, T Ugniwenko, U Frey, W Franks, E Perriard, J-C Perriard, A Blau, C Ziegler, A Hierlemann.   

Abstract

A high degree of connectivity and the coordinated electrical activity of neural cells or networks are believed to be the reason that the brain is capable of highly sophisticated information processing. Likewise, the effectiveness of an animal heart largely depends on such coordinated cell activity. To advance our understanding of these complex biological systems, high spatiotemporal-resolution techniques to monitor the cell electrical activity and an ideally seamless interaction between cells and recording devices are desired. Here we present a monolithic microsystem in complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology that provides bidirectional communication (stimulation and recording) between standard electronics technology and cultured electrogenic cells. The microchip can be directly used as a substrate for cell culturing, it features circuitry units per electrode for stimulation and immediate cell signal treatment, and it provides on-chip signal transformation as well as a digital interface so that a very fast, almost real-time interaction (2 ms loop time from event recognition to, e.g., a defined stimulation) is possible at remarkable signal quality. The corresponding spontaneous and stimulated electrical activity recordings with neuronal and cardiac cell cultures will be presented. The system can be used to, e.g., study the development of neural networks, reveal the effects of neuronal plasticity and study cellular or network activity in response to pharmacological treatments.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 17097869     DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2006.10.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biosens Bioelectron        ISSN: 0956-5663            Impact factor:   10.618


  16 in total

1.  Reflective lens-free imaging on high-density silicon microelectrode arrays for monitoring and evaluation of in vitro cardiac contractility.

Authors:  Thomas Pauwelyn; Richard Stahl; Lakyn Mayo; Xuan Zheng; Andy Lambrechts; Stefan Janssens; Liesbet Lagae; Veerle Reumers; Dries Braeken
Journal:  Biomed Opt Express       Date:  2018-03-22       Impact factor: 3.732

2.  Properties and application of a multichannel integrated circuit for low-artifact, patterned electrical stimulation of neural tissue.

Authors:  Paweł Hottowy; Andrzej Skoczeń; Deborah E Gunning; Sergei Kachiguine; Keith Mathieson; Alexander Sher; Piotr Wiącek; Alan M Litke; Władysław Dąbrowski
Journal:  J Neural Eng       Date:  2012-11-16       Impact factor: 5.379

3.  Synthetically encoded ultrashort-channel nanowire transistors for fast, pointlike cellular signal detection.

Authors:  Tzahi Cohen-Karni; Didier Casanova; James F Cahoon; Quan Qing; David C Bell; Charles M Lieber
Journal:  Nano Lett       Date:  2012-04-06       Impact factor: 11.189

4.  Graphene and nanowire transistors for cellular interfaces and electrical recording.

Authors:  Tzahi Cohen-Karni; Quan Qing; Qiang Li; Ying Fang; Charles M Lieber
Journal:  Nano Lett       Date:  2010-03-10       Impact factor: 11.189

5.  Experimental Investigation on Spontaneously Active Hippocampal Cultures Recorded by Means of High-Density MEAs: Analysis of the Spatial Resolution Effects.

Authors:  Alessandro Maccione; Mauro Gandolfo; Mariateresa Tedesco; Thierry Nieus; Kilian Imfeld; Sergio Martinoia; Luca Berdondini
Journal:  Front Neuroeng       Date:  2010-05-10

6.  Flexible electrical recording from cells using nanowire transistor arrays.

Authors:  Tzahi Cohen-Karni; Brian P Timko; Lucien E Weiss; Charles M Lieber
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-04-13       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Parallel recording of neurotransmitters release from chromaffin cells using a 10×10 CMOS IC potentiostat array with on-chip working electrodes.

Authors:  Brian N Kim; Adam D Herbst; Sung J Kim; Bradley A Minch; Manfred Lindau
Journal:  Biosens Bioelectron       Date:  2012-10-05       Impact factor: 10.618

8.  A 1024-Channel CMOS Microelectrode Array With 26,400 Electrodes for Recording and Stimulation of Electrogenic Cells In Vitro.

Authors:  Marco Ballini; Jan Müller; Paolo Livi; Yihui Chen; Urs Frey; Alexander Stettler; Amir Shadmani; Vijay Viswam; Ian Lloyd Jones; David Jäckel; Milos Radivojevic; Marta K Lewandowska; Wei Gong; Michele Fiscella; Douglas J Bakkum; Flavio Heer; Andreas Hierlemann
Journal:  IEEE J Solid-State Circuits       Date:  2014-11       Impact factor: 5.013

9.  Stimulation and Artifact-Suppression Techniques for In Vitro High-Density Microelectrode Array Systems.

Authors:  Amir Shadmani; Vijay Viswam; Yihui Chen; Raziyeh Bounik; Jelena Dragas; Milos Radivojevic; Sydney Geissler; Sergey Sitnikov; Jan Muller; Andreas Hierlemann
Journal:  IEEE Trans Biomed Eng       Date:  2019-01-01       Impact factor: 4.538

10.  2048 Action Potential Recording Channels with 2.4 µVrms Noise and Stimulation Artifact Suppression.

Authors:  Vijay Viswam; Yihui Chen; Amir Shadmani; Jelena Dragas; Raziyeh Bounik; Radivojevic Milos; Jan Müller; Andreas Hierlemann
Journal:  IEEE Biomed Circuits Syst Conf       Date:  2017-01-26
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