Flexible Neural Probes with Optical Artifact-Suppressing Modification and Biofriendly Polypeptide Coating

Minghao Wang, Ye Fan, Lili Li, Fei Wen, Bangbang Guo, Minyi Jin, Jiahui Xu, Yuhao Zhou, Xiaoyang Kang, Bowen Ji, Yuhua Cheng, Gaofeng Wang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

The advent of optogenetics provides a well-targeted tool to manipulate neurons because of its high time resolution and cell-type specificity. Recently, closed-loop neural manipulation techniques consisting of optical stimulation and electrical recording have been widely used. However, metal microelectrodes exposed to light radiation could generate photoelectric noise, thus causing loss or distortion of neural signal in recording channels. Meanwhile, the biocompatibility of neural probes remains to be improved. Here, five kinds of neural interface materials are deposited on flexible polyimide-based neural probes and illuminated with a series of blue laser pulses to study their electrochemical performance and photoelectric noises for single-unit recording. The results show that the modifications can not only improve the electrochemical performance, but can also reduce the photoelectric artifacts. In particular, the double-layer composite consisting of platinum-black and conductive polymer has the best comprehensive performance. Thus, a layer of polypeptide is deposited on the entire surface of the double-layer modified neural probes to further improve their biocompatibility. The results show that the biocompatible polypeptide coating has little effect on the electrochemical performance of the neural probe, and it may serve as a drug carrier due to its special micromorphology.

Original languageEnglish
Article number199
JournalMicromachines
Volume13
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2022

Keywords

  • Electrochemical modification
  • Neural interface
  • Neural probe
  • Photoelectric noise
  • Polypeptide

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