| Literature DB >> 29184478 |
Alejandro Barriga-Rivera1,2,3, Lilach Bareket1,2, Josef Goding4, Ulises A Aregueta-Robles1, Gregg J Suaning2.
Abstract
The bypassing of degenerated photoreceptors using retinal neurostimulators is helping the blind to recover functional vision. Researchers are investigating new ways to improve visual percepts elicited by these means as the vision produced by these early devices remain rudimentary. However, several factors are hampering the progression of bionic technologies: the charge injection limits of metallic electrodes, the mechanical mismatch between excitable tissue and the stimulating elements, neural and electric crosstalk, the physical size of the implanted devices, and the inability to selectively activate different types of retinal neurons. Electrochemical and mechanical limitations are being addressed by the application of electromaterials such as conducting polymers, carbon nanotubes and nanocrystalline diamonds, among other biomaterials, to electrical neuromodulation. In addition, the use of synthetic hydrogels and cell-laden biomaterials is promising better interfaces, as it opens a door to establishing synaptic connections between the electrode material and the excitable cells. Finally, new electrostimulation approaches relying on the use of high-frequency stimulation and field overlapping techniques are being developed to better replicate the neural code of the retina. All these elements combined will bring bionic vision beyond its present state and into the realm of a viable, mainstream therapy for vision loss.Entities:
Keywords: carbon nanotubes; conducting polymers; living electrodes; nanocrystalline diamonds; quantum dots; retinal neurostimulation; silicon nanowires; visual prosthesis
Year: 2017 PMID: 29184478 PMCID: PMC5694472 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2017.00620
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Schematic representation of different techniques to restore vision. (A1–A3) Illustrate the stem cell transplantation technique. (A1) Shows a healthy structure of the eye with healthy retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE). (A2) Represents the degeneration of the retina due to a degradation of the RPE, including loss of photoreceptors. (A3) illustrates an example of an implant of a RPE patch graft of stem cells using a supporting substrate. (B1–B3) describes the CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing technique. (B1) Shows the delivery of RNA-guided Cas9 nuclease to the extracellular space of the retinal tissue. (B2) Illustrates how electroporation (change in cell membrane permeability using an electric field) can allow Cas9 to enter to the cytoplasm of the cells. Cas9 then interrogates the cell's DNA allowing repair of the target gene (B3). (C1,C2) Illustrate the mechanism of sight restoration using optogenetics. In physiological function, light transduction takes place at the photoreceptors (C1). When degradation occurs (C2), an injection of adeno-asociated viral (AAV) vectors can induce expression of photosensitive proteins in the remaining retinal neurons. (D) Illustrates the implantation sites for electrode arrays in the restoration of visual function using electrostimulation: (1) epiretinal, (2) subretinal, (3) suprachoroidal, (4) intrascleral, (5) thalamic, and (6) cortical prostheses.
Figure 2Chemical structures of polypyrrole (PPy), poly(3,4ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) and polyaniline (PANI).
Figure 3Scanning electron micrograph showing nodular surface morphology of PEDOT/pTS at 2500X magnification.
Summary of reported conducting hydrogel systems.
| PPy | Polyacrylamide | CH containing <5% PPy had similar CSC as conventional PPy | Kim et al., |
| PANI | Poly((2-acrylamido-2-methyl propane sulphonic acid) | Electrical conductivity of 4 S.cm−1 achieved with high PANI loading | Siddhanta and Gangopadhyay, |
| PANI | PANI-phytic acid | High capacitance electrodes (480 F.g−1) retaining 83% of original capacitance after 10,000 cycles | Pan et al., |
| PANI | Poly(acrylic acid) | Mechanically strong gels (1.7 MPa fracture stress) with moderate conductivity (5 mS.cm−1) | Xia and Zhu, |
| PEDOT | PVA-Taurine | High CSC (130 mc.cm−2), low impedance (24 Ω.cm2) electrodes | Goding et al., |
| PEDOT | PVA-Heparin | Reduce impedance of platinum electrodes by 85%. Biofunctionalisation to modulate biological response | Green et al., |
Summary of studies using conducting polymer electrodes in implantable devices for stimulation-based applications.
| PEDOT/LiClO4 nanotubes | Barrel cortex of rat | PEDOT provided stable reduction in impedance of gold electrode by 46% during 49 days of implantation | Abidian et al., |
| PEDOT/PSS-CNT | Reduced stimulation thresholds compared to TiN electrode | Samba et al., | |
| PEDOT/pTS | Suprachoroidal implantation in feline | PEDOT had half the interfacial voltage of platinum control | Green et al., |
| PEDOT/PSS | Barrel cortex of rat | 200 kΩ reduction in impedance and CIL 15 times higher compared to PtIr control | Venkatraman et al., |
| PPy/pTS-NGF | Cochlea of guinea pig | Nerve growth factor delivered from PPy increased SGN density and reduced response threshold | Richardson et al., |
Materials investigated as cellular carriers for living electrode coatings.
| Tailorable stiffness | PEG (Bryant and Anseth, | PEG-based (Almany and Seliktar, | ||
| Control on degradation rates | PEG (Wang et al., | PEG-Fib(Almany and Seliktar, | ||
| Support cell growth | Fibrin (Georges et al., | PEG-Fib (Almany and Seliktar, | ||
| Support neuronal differentiation | Fibrin+NT3 (Taylor and Sakiyama-Elbert, | PEG-CNTF (Burdick et al., | ||
| Modification with anti-inflammatory agents | PLLA/PLGA/PEDOT +DEX (Abidian et al., | Alginate+PLGA+Dex (Kim and Martin, | ||
| Topographical nerve guidance | Graphene (Li et al., | |||
| Allow passive charge transfer | Alginate-based (Kim et al., | PVA-based (Green et al., | PVA-based (Goding et al., |
αMSH, α-melanocyte stimulating hormone; NGF, nerve growth factor; BDNF, brain derived neurotrophic factor; GDNF, glial cell-derived neurotrophic factor; NT-3–neurotrophin3; DEX; Dexamethasone; PEDOT, poly(ethylene dioxythiophene); PEG, poly(ethyleneglycol); PEG-PLA, poly(ethyleneglycol)-poly(lactic acid); PEVA; Poly(ethylene-co-vinylacetate). PVA; poly(vinyl alcohol); PLLA, poly(L-lactide); PLGA, poly(lactide-co-glycolide).
Figure 4Combination of coating technologies with tissue engineering approaches as a method to bridge the neural interface.