Tracking axonal action potential propagation on a high-density microelectrode array across hundreds of sites
Cerebral Cortex
0301 basic medicine
0303 health sciences
Time Factors
Action Potentials
Embryo, Mammalian
Axons
Electric Stimulation
Electrophysiological Phenomena
Rats
03 medical and health sciences
Semiconductors
Animals
Rats, Wistar
Microelectrodes
DOI:
10.1038/ncomms3181
Publication Date:
2013-07-19T10:08:01Z
AUTHORS (8)
ABSTRACT
Axons are traditionally considered stable transmission cables, but evidence of the regulation of action potential propagation demonstrates that axons may have more important roles. However, their small diameters render intracellular recordings challenging, and low-magnitude extracellular signals are difficult to detect and assign. Better experimental access to axonal function would help to advance this field. Here we report methods to electrically visualize action potential propagation and network topology in cortical neurons grown over custom arrays, which contain 11,011 microelectrodes and are fabricated using complementary metal oxide semiconductor technology. Any neuron lying on the array can be recorded at high spatio-temporal resolution, and simultaneously precisely stimulated with little artifact. We find substantial velocity differences occurring locally within single axons, suggesting that the temporal control of a neuron's output may contribute to neuronal information processing.
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