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Heterogeneous silicon mesostructures for lipid-supported bioelectric interfaces.

Yuanwen JiangJoão L Carvalho-de-SouzaRaymond C S WongZhiqiang LuoDieter IsheimXiaobing ZuoAlan W NichollsIl Woong JungJiping YueDi-Jia LiuYucai WangVincent De AndradeXianghui XiaoLuizetta NavrazhnykhDara E WeissXiaoyang WuDavid N SeidmanFrancisco BezanillaBozhi Tian
Published in: Nature materials (2016)
Silicon-based materials have widespread application as biophysical tools and biomedical devices. Here we introduce a biocompatible and degradable mesostructured form of silicon with multi-scale structural and chemical heterogeneities. The material was synthesized using mesoporous silica as a template through a chemical vapour deposition process. It has an amorphous atomic structure, an ordered nanowire-based framework and random submicrometre voids, and shows an average Young's modulus that is 2-3 orders of magnitude smaller than that of single-crystalline silicon. In addition, we used the heterogeneous silicon mesostructures to design a lipid-bilayer-supported bioelectric interface that is remotely controlled and temporally transient, and that permits non-genetic and subcellular optical modulation of the electrophysiology dynamics in single dorsal root ganglia neurons. Our findings suggest that the biomimetic expansion of silicon into heterogeneous and deformable forms can open up opportunities in extracellular biomaterial or bioelectric systems.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord
  • room temperature
  • high resolution
  • fatty acid
  • spinal cord injury
  • drug release
  • ionic liquid
  • oxide nanoparticles