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Photo-Chemical Stimulation of Neurons with Organic Semiconductors.

Achilleas SavvaAdel HamaGabriel Herrera-LópezTony SchmidtLudovico MigliaccioNadia SteinerMalak KawanHubert FiumelliPierre J MagistrettiIain McCullochDerya BaranNicola GaspariniRainer SchindlEric Daniel GlowackiSahika Inal
Published in: Advanced science (Weinheim, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany) (2023)
Recent advances in light-responsive materials enabled the development of devices that can wirelessly activate tissue with light. Here it is shown that solution-processed organic heterojunctions can stimulate the activity of primary neurons at low intensities of light via photochemical reactions. The p-type semiconducting polymer PDCBT and the n-type semiconducting small molecule ITIC (a non-fullerene acceptor) are coated on glass supports, forming a p-n junction with high photosensitivity. Patch clamp measurements show that low-intensity white light is converted into a cue that triggers action potentials in primary cortical neurons. The study shows that neat organic semiconducting p-n bilayers can exchange photogenerated charges with oxygen and other chemical compounds in cell culture conditions. Through several controlled experimental conditions, photo-capacitive, photo-thermal, and direct hydrogen peroxide effects on neural function are excluded, with photochemical delivery being the possible mechanism. The profound advantages of low-intensity photo-chemical intervention with neuron electrophysiology pave the way for developing wireless light-based therapy based on emerging organic semiconductors.
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