Stretchable multichannel antennas in soft wireless optoelectronic implants for optogenetics

Optogenetic methods to modulate cells and signaling pathways via targeted expression and activation of light-sensitive proteins have greatly accelerated the process of mapping complex neural circuits and defining their roles in physiological and pathological contexts. Recently demonstrated technolog...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2016-12, Vol.113 (50), p.E8169-E8177
Hauptverfasser: Park, Sung Il, Shin, Gunchul, McCall, Jordan G., Al-Hasani, Ream, Norris, Aaron, Xia, Li, Brenner, Daniel S., Noh, Kyung Nim, Bang, Sang Yun, Bhatti, Dionnet L., Jang, Kyung-In, Kang, Seung-Kyun, Mickle, Aaron D., Dussor, Gregory, Price, Theodore J., Gereau, Robert W., Bruchas, Michael R., Rogers, John A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Optogenetic methods to modulate cells and signaling pathways via targeted expression and activation of light-sensitive proteins have greatly accelerated the process of mapping complex neural circuits and defining their roles in physiological and pathological contexts. Recently demonstrated technologies based on injectable, microscale inorganic light-emitting diodes (μ-ILEDs) with wireless control and power delivery strategies offer important functionality in such experiments, by eliminating the external tethers associated with traditional fiber optic approaches. Existing wireless μ-ILED embodiments allow, however, illumination only at a single targeted region of the brain with a single optical wavelength and over spatial ranges of operation that are constrained by the radio frequency power transmission hardware. Here we report stretchable, multiresonance antennas and battery-free schemes for multichannel wireless operation of independently addressable, multicolor μ-ILEDs with fully implantable, miniaturized platforms. This advance, as demonstrated through in vitro and in vivo studies using thin, mechanically soft systems that separately control as many as three different μ-ILEDs, relies on specially designed stretchable antennas in which parallel capacitive coupling circuits yield several independent, well-separated operating frequencies, as verified through experimental and modeling results. When used in combination with active motion-tracking antenna arrays, these devices enable multichannel optogenetic research on complex behavioral responses in groups of animals over large areas at low levels of radio frequency power (
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1611769113