Experimental Verification for Numerical Simulation of Thalamic Stimulation-Evoked Calcium-Sensitive Fluorescence and Electrophysiology with Self-Assembled Multifunctional Optrode.
Yao-Wen LiangMing-Liang LaiFeng-Mao ChiuHsin-Yi TsengYu-Chun LoSsu-Ju LiChing-Wen ChangPo-Chuan ChenYou-Yin ChenPublished in: Biosensors (2023)
Owing to its capacity to eliminate a long-standing methodological limitation, fiber photometry can assist research gaining novel insight into neural systems. Fiber photometry can reveal artifact-free neural activity under deep brain stimulation (DBS). Although evoking neural potential with DBS is an effective method for mediating neural activity and neural function, the relationship between DBS-evoked neural Ca 2+ change and DBS-evoked neural electrophysiology remains unknown. Therefore, in this study, a self-assembled optrode was demonstrated as a DBS stimulator and an optical biosensor capable of concurrently recording Ca 2+ fluorescence and electrophysiological signals. Before the in vivo experiment, the volume of tissue activated (VTA) was estimated, and the simulated Ca 2+ signals were presented using Monte Carlo (MC) simulation to approach the realistic in vivo environment. When VTA and the simulated Ca 2+ signals were combined, the distribution of simulated Ca 2+ fluorescence signals matched the VTA region. In addition, the in vivo experiment revealed a correlation between the local field potential (LFP) and the Ca 2+ fluorescence signal in the evoked region, revealing the relationship between electrophysiology and the performance of neural Ca 2+ concentration behavior. Concurrent with the VTA volume, simulated Ca 2+ intensity, and the in vivo experiment, these data suggested that the behavior of neural electrophysiology was consistent with the phenomenon of Ca 2+ influx to neurons.
Keyphrases
- deep brain stimulation
- parkinson disease
- protein kinase
- obsessive compulsive disorder
- single molecule
- squamous cell carcinoma
- drug delivery
- magnetic resonance
- gene expression
- climate change
- spinal cord injury
- high resolution
- gold nanoparticles
- single cell
- quantum dots
- artificial intelligence
- sensitive detection
- rectal cancer
- dna methylation
- computed tomography
- monte carlo
- energy transfer
- locally advanced