| Literature DB >> 30104618 |
Michele Dipalo1, Giovanni Melle1, Laura Lovato1, Andrea Jacassi1, Francesca Santoro2, Valeria Caprettini1, Andrea Schirato3, Alessandro Alabastri3, Denis Garoli1, Giulia Bruno1, Francesco Tantussi1, Francesco De Angelis4.
Abstract
The ability to monitor electrogenic cells accurately plays a pivotal role in neuroscience, cardiology and cell biology. Despite pioneering research and long-lasting efforts, the existing methods for intracellular recording of action potentials on the large network scale suffer limitations that prevent their widespread use. Here, we introduce the concept of a meta-electrode, a planar porous electrode that mimics the optical and biological behaviour of three-dimensional plasmonic antennas but also preserves the ability to work as an electrode. Its synergistic combination with plasmonic optoacoustic poration allows commercial complementary metal-oxide semiconductor multi-electrode arrays to record intracellular action potentials in large cellular networks. We apply this approach to measure signals from human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiac cells, rodent primary cardiomyocytes and immortalized cell types and demonstrate the possibility of non-invasively testing a variety of relevant drugs. Due to its robustness and easiness of use, we expect the method will be rapidly adopted by the scientific community and by pharmaceutical companies.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30104618 DOI: 10.1038/s41565-018-0222-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Nanotechnol ISSN: 1748-3387 Impact factor: 39.213