In-vivo integration of soft neural probes through high-resolution printing of liquid electronics on the cranium

Current soft neural probes are still operated by bulky, rigid electronics mounted to a body, which deteriorate the integrity of the device to biological systems and restrict the free behavior of a subject. We report a soft, conformable neural interface system that can monitor the single-unit activit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2024-02, Vol.15 (1), p.1772-1772, Article 1772
Hauptverfasser: Park, Young-Geun, Kwon, Yong Won, Koh, Chin Su, Kim, Enji, Lee, Dong Ha, Kim, Sumin, Mun, Jongmin, Hong, Yeon-Mi, Lee, Sanghoon, Kim, Ju-Young, Lee, Jae-Hyun, Jung, Hyun Ho, Cheon, Jinwoo, Chang, Jin Woo, Park, Jang-Ung
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Current soft neural probes are still operated by bulky, rigid electronics mounted to a body, which deteriorate the integrity of the device to biological systems and restrict the free behavior of a subject. We report a soft, conformable neural interface system that can monitor the single-unit activities of neurons with long-term stability. The system implements soft neural probes in the brain, and their subsidiary electronics which are directly printed on the cranial surface. The high-resolution printing of liquid metals forms soft neural probes with a cellular-scale diameter and adaptable lengths. Also, the printing of liquid metal-based circuits and interconnections along the curvature of the cranium enables the conformal integration of electronics to the body, and the cranial circuit delivers neural signals to a smartphone wirelessly. In the in-vivo studies using mice, the system demonstrates long-term recording (33 weeks) of neural activities in arbitrary brain regions. In T-maze behavioral tests, the system shows the behavior-induced activation of neurons in multiple brain regions. Neural systems are often bulky and heavy. Here, the authors produce a conformable neural interface for mice using liquid metals directly printed on the skull that can monitor neural activities with long-term stability.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-024-45768-0