Issue 11, 2008

Integrating multi-unit electrophysiology and plastic culture dishes for network neuroscience

Abstract

The electrophysiological characterisation of cultured neurons is of paramount importance for drug discovery, safety pharmacology and basic research in the neurosciences. Technologies offering low cost, low technical complexity and potential for scalability towards high-throughput electrophysiology on in vitroneurons would be advantageous, in particular for screening purposes. Here we describe a plastic culture substrate supporting low-complexity multi-unit loose-patch recording and stimulation of developing networks while retaining manufacturability compatible with low-cost and large-scale production. Our hybrid polydimethylsilane (PDMS)-on-polystyrene structures include chambers (6 mm in diameter) and microchannels (25 μm × 3.7 μm × 1 mm) serving as substrate-embedded recording pipettes. Somas are plated and retained in the chambers due to geometrical constraints and their processes grow along the microchannels, effectively establishing a loose-patch configuration without human intervention. We demonstrate that off-the-shelf voltage-clamp, current-clamp and extracellular amplifiers can be used to record and stimulate multi-unit activity with the aid of our dishes. Spikes up to 50 pA in voltage-clamp and 300 μV in current-clamp modes are recorded in sparse and bursting activity patterns characteristic of 1 week-old hippocampal cultures. Moreover, spike sorting employing principal component analysis (PCA) confirms that single microchannels support the recording of multiple neurons. Overall, this work suggests a strategy to endow conventional culture plasticware with added functionality to enable cost-efficient network electrophysiology.

Graphical abstract: Integrating multi-unit electrophysiology and plastic culture dishes for network neuroscience

Supplementary files

Additions and corrections

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
07 Feb 2008
Accepted
15 Jul 2008
First published
07 Oct 2008

Lab Chip, 2008,8, 1896-1905

Integrating multi-unit electrophysiology and plastic culture dishes for network neuroscience

R. Morales, M. Riss, L. Wang, R. Gavín, J. A. Del Río, R. Alcubilla and E. Claverol-Tinturé, Lab Chip, 2008, 8, 1896 DOI: 10.1039/B802165A

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