| Literature DB >> 35439419 |
Guangfu Wu1, Nannan Zhang2, Avi Matarasso3, Ian Heck4, Huijie Li1, Wei Lu5, J Glenn Phaup6, Michael J Schneider1, Yixin Wu5, Zhengyan Weng1, He Sun1, Zan Gao1, Xincheng Zhang1, Stefan G Sandberg7, Dilruba Parvin8, Elena Seaholm3, Syed Kamrul Islam8, Xueju Wang9, Paul E M Phillips7, Daniel C Castro10,11,12, Shinghua Ding2,4, De-Pei Li6, Michael R Bruchas3,10,11,12, Yi Zhang1.
Abstract
The real-time monitoring of neurochemical release in vivo plays a critical role in understanding the biochemical process of the complex nervous system. Current technologies for such applications, including microdialysis and fast-scan cyclic voltammetry, suffer from limited spatiotemporal resolution or poor selectivity. Here, we report a soft implantable aptamer-graphene microtransistor probe for real-time monitoring of neurochemical release. As a demonstration, we show the monitoring of dopamine with nearly cellular-scale spatial resolution, high selectivity (dopamine sensor >19-fold over norepinephrine), and picomolar sensitivity, simultaneously. Systematic benchtop evaluations, ex vivo experiments, and in vivo studies in mice models highlight the key features and demonstrate the capability of capturing the dopamine release dynamics evoked by pharmacological stimulation, suggesting the potential applications in basic neuroscience studies and studying neurological disease-related processes. The developed system can be easily adapted for monitoring other neurochemicals and drugs by simply replacing the aptamers functionalized on the graphene microtransistors.Entities:
Keywords: dopamine; graphene microtransistors; neurochemical sensors; real-time monitoring
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35439419 PMCID: PMC9420334 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.2c00289
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 12.262