RESUMO
It has been proposed that cell-type-specific bioelectronic interfaces for neuronal circuits could be established by utilizing the function of synapse organizers. For this purpose, using neurexin-1ß and a peptide tag, we engineered compact synapse organizers that do not interact with the naturally occurring receptors but induce presynaptic differentiation upon contact with nanobody-decorated objects in cultured mammalian and chick forebrain neurons. In chick neurons, the engineered organizer exerted synaptogenesis typically in â¼4 h after the contact, even under an air atmosphere at room temperature, thereby providing a useful cellular model for establishing the molecularly inducible neuron-microelectrode interface.
Assuntos
Neurônios , Sinapses , Animais , Microeletrodos , Sinapses/fisiologia , Diferenciação Celular , Peptídeos , MamíferosRESUMO
The conventional microelectrodes for recording neuronal activities do not have innate selectivity to cell type, which is one of the critical limitations for the detailed analysis of neuronal circuits. In this study, we engineered a downsized variant of the artificial synapse organizer based on neurexin1ß and a peptide-tag, fabricated gold microelectrodes functionalized with the receptor for the organizer, and performed validation experiments in primary cultured neurons. Successful inductions of synapse-like junctions were detected at the sites of contact between neurons expressing the engineered synapse organizer and functionalized microelectrodes, but not in the negative control experiment in which the electrode functionalization was omitted. Such a molecularly inducible neuron-microelectrode junction could be the basis for the next-generation electrophysiological technique enabling cell type-selective recording.