| Literature DB >> 34211364 |
Sara Pimenta1, José A Rodrigues1, Francisca Machado2,3, João F Ribeiro1, Marino J Maciel1, Oleksandr Bondarchuk4, Patricia Monteiro2,3, João Gaspar4, José H Correia1, Luis Jacinto2,3.
Abstract
Flexible polymer neural probes are an attractive emerging approach for invasive brain recordings, given that they can minimize the risks of brain damage or glial scaring. However, densely packed electrode sites, which can facilitate neuronal data analysis, are not widely available in flexible probes. Here, we present a new flexible polyimide neural probe, based on standard and low-cost lithography processes, which has 32 closely spaced 10 μm diameter gold electrode sites at two different depths from the probe surface arranged in a matrix, with inter-site distances of only 5 μm. The double-layer design and fabrication approach implemented also provides additional stiffening just sufficient to prevent probe buckling during brain insertion. This approach avoids typical laborious augmentation strategies used to increase flexible probes' mechanical rigidity while allowing a small brain insertion footprint. Chemical composition analysis and metrology of structural, mechanical, and electrical properties demonstrated the viability of this fabrication approach. Finally, in vivo functional assessment tests in the mouse cortex were performed as well as histological assessment of the insertion footprint, validating the biological applicability of this flexible neural probe for acquiring high quality neuronal recordings with high signal to noise ratio (SNR) and reduced acute trauma.Entities:
Keywords: electrophysiology; flexible polyimide probe; gold electrodes; lithography processes; neuronal activity; optogenetics; polymer microfabrication
Year: 2021 PMID: 34211364 PMCID: PMC8239195 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2021.663174
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
FIGURE 1Neural probe fabrication process (not to scale). Microfabrication processes for: polyimide substrate deposition (A–B); patterning and passivation of bottom (C–F) and top (G–J) electrode sites, vias and contact pads; final polyimide etching to expose electrode sites and define probe geometry (K–N); and probe release (O).
FIGURE 2Schematic illustration of the flexible polyimide neural probe design and its dimensions. (A) Full probe view including flexible connector pad (left) and printed circuit board (PCB) for packaging (right). The central inset shows the distribution of the closely spaced electrode sites at the tip of the probe. (B) Fabricated flexible neural probe coupled to the PCB.
FIGURE 3SEM images of the flexible polyimide neural probe. (A) top view of probe shaft and tip containing the electrode sites. (B,C) detail view of the probe tip, showing the closely spaced electrode sites at two different depths; and (D) cross-section view (obtained with a scalpel) of the probe shaft showing two metallic vias separated by the intermediate polyimide layer.
FIGURE 4EDS and XPS analysis of the neural probe. Chemical composition of a bottom (A) and a top (B) electrode site with clear peaks for gold. (C) Chemical composition of the probe substrate with a clear peak for carbon. (D) XPS results for the probe surface showing an increase of gold as function of the etching time.
FIGURE 5Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) measurements of the bottom and top electrode sites of fabricated neural probe. (A) Mean impedance vs. frequency. (B) Mean phase angle vs. frequency.
FIGURE 6Mechanical characterization of fabricated neural probe. (A) Stress-strain curve. The Young’s modulus, determined by the slope of the linear region of the stress-strain curve, was approximately 5 GPa. (B) Setup arrangement (left) and the force vs. displacement plot (right) for the longitudinal compression tests on a rigid base. The maximum compression force was 7.5 mN at the maximum displacement. (C) Setup arrangement (left) and the force vs. displacement plots (right) for insertion and extraction tests on brain phantom (0.6% agar gel). The minimum force required for probe insertion was approximately 1 mN (dimpling of 0.5 mm). The maximum implantation force was 5.2 mN at the maximum displacement (6 mm).
FIGURE 7In vivo recordings in mouse cortex and histological assessment of insertion footprint. (A) Neural probe insertion track (red) in primary motor cortex (M1) (magnification 2×). (B) Neural probe electrode site layout with top electrode sites (columns 1 and 4) in blue and bottom electrode sites (columns 2 and 3) in red. (C) Example of spontaneous neuronal activity recorded simultaneously from all top (groups 1 and 4) and bottom (groups 2 and 3) electrode sites of the neural probe (signals band-pass filtered between 0.3 and 6 kHz). Blue squares mark the three channels where twelve isolated single units display the highest signal amplitudes. (D) Spontaneous and opto-evoked neuronal activity with light stimulation periods marked in blue; an example signal trace showing spontaneous neuronal activity (0–0.5 s) and opto modulation trials (0.5–1.5 s, light ON for 5 ms marked in blue) (top; filtered 0.3–6 kHz), spike raster plot for three opto-stimulation periods, each with five trials (middle) and cumulative peri-stimulus time histogram (PSTH) with total spike count across time for trials over three stimulation periods (bottom). (E) neural probe insertion footprint in cortex on horizontal brain slice (magnification 20×); measured footprint was 135 μm wide and 26 μm thick, which approx. matches the neural probe’s dimensions.