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Protruding cantilever microelectrode array to monitor the inner electrical activity of cerebral organoids.

Oramany PhouphetlinthongEmma PartiotCorentin BernouAudrey SebbanRaphaël GaudinBenoit Charlot
Published in: Lab on a chip (2023)
Stem cell-derived cerebral organoids are artificially grown miniature organ-like structures mimicking embryonic brain architecture. They are composed of multiple neural cell types with 3D cell layer organization exhibiting local field potential. Measuring the extracellular electrical activity by means of conventional planar microelectrode arrays is particularly challenging due to the 3D architecture of organoids. In order to monitor the intra-organoid electrical activity of thick spheroid-shaped samples, we developed long protruding microelectrode arrays able to penetrate the inner regions of cerebral organoids to measure the local potential of neurons within the organoids. A new microfabrication process has been developed which, thanks to the relaxation of internal stresses of a stack of materials deposited over a sacrificial layer, allows one to build a protruding cantilever microelectrode array placed at the apex of beams which rise vertically, over two hundred microns. These slender beams inserted deeply into the organoids give access to the recording of local field potential from neurons buried inside the organoid. This novel device shall provide valuable tools to study neural functions in greater detail.
Keyphrases
  • deep brain stimulation
  • induced pluripotent stem cells
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage
  • single cell
  • spinal cord
  • cerebral ischemia
  • high density
  • spinal cord injury
  • bone marrow
  • risk assessment
  • carbon nanotubes