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Better Way to Wire Up Cells

Nanowire arrays could be used for future medical implants.

By Katherine Bourzac

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

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Understanding how brain and heart cells process and generate electrical signals could lead to a new understanding of neurological and heart disease. Until a few years ago, however, it simply wasn't possible to make electrical recordings at the level of single cells. In 2006, Harvard researchers used nanowire transistors to measure electrical signals at 50 points along a single neuron. Now the same research group has developed a new nanowire recording system and have used it to capture some of the most precise, high-quality electrical recordings ever made from heart cells.

Cell signals: Cells grown on a flexible plastic substrate outlined in red are positioned over a nanowire transistor array with the help of a microscope. Other components highlighted with colored arrows include a heating system to keep cells warm (blue), electrical inputs (red), and a manipulator for moving the cells (green).
Credit: Charles Lieber
Multimedia
video  Watch a patch of beating heart cells over an array of nanowire transistors.

The Harvard work, led by chemistry and chemical-biology professor Charles Lieber, is "at the forefront of research in integrating nanowire nanotechnology and bioscience," says Zhong Lin Wang, Regents Professor at the Center for Nanostructure Characterization, at Georgia Tech.

Nanoscale devices that interface electrically with cells could lead not only to a better understanding of the origins of disease, but also to better neural prostheses and other medical devices.

Lieber says that the goal of his lab is to make electrical devices that interface with biological tissues on a biologically meaningful scale--in other words, on the nanoscale. Cells process electrical signals as those signals travel down the length of a cell; the subcellular electrical processing that takes place in neurons, for example, plays an important role in normal and abnormal learning and memory. "If one wants to understand how signals propagate and why it doesn't happen in the way it should" in diseases such as epilepsy or heart arrhythmias, "you need to measure at a fine scale," Lieber says.

To create such fine-scale recordings, Lieber uses transistors made of silicon wires just tens of nanometers in diameter. The nanowires are grown in a reaction chamber, then aligned on a silicon wafer and supplied with metal electrodes and interconnects. Until now, researchers have grown cells on top of a chip in order to interface nanowires with cells.

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"We recognized that one doesn't necessarily have to grow the cells on the substrate," says Lieber. Instead, in research described online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the Harvard group grows cells on sheets of flexible polymer. Nanowires themselves are cell friendly, but a rigid silicon wafer is not the friendliest place for biological tissues to grow. By growing the tissues separately on plastic substrates, the Harvard researchers can make better tissue samples to work with. Better samples means that more meaningful measurements. And because the Harvard researchers can position the tissue over the nanowires under a microscope, they can choose particular tissue areas or particular cells from which to record. Being able to bring an already growing group of cells in contact with a recording array will also be critical for making future implants.

"The modular approach is quite elegant," says Peidong Yang, a professor of chemistry at the University of California, Berkeley. Yang has used nanowire arrays to study the effects of electrical inputs on stem-cell development.

Comments

  • Curing disease is great but...
    Could this technology be used to interface Synthetic Biological Systems with silicon for the purpose of executing logic functions?

    Or conversely could this serve as an interface between the brain and either disconnected muscular systems or missing/injured organs: eyes, ears, etc.. Or another UI for devices.

    Links to work appreciated, thanks.
    Rate this comment: 12345

    rlindsl
    04/21/2009
    Posts:19
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    4/5
    • Re: Curing disease is great but...
      Hi rlindsl
      You might want to check out these two links for more on those types of applications of nanowires (and nanotubes). People in this field are definitely thinking about neural prosthetics and the neural networks you're talking about, there are more stories about this on our site than these two but here's a start:
      http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/17361/
      http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/16895/
      Rate this comment: 12345

      Katherine Bo...
      04/22/2009
      Posts:23
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      4/5
      • Re: Curing disease is great but...
        Thank you for the posting Ms. Bourzac. I would guess that what I am looking for will not occur until autologous stem-cells are used to create a neural layer that is grown on the array in the lab and then that neural layer is used to form an interface, neural layer (grown) to neural structure of brain or neural layer (grown) to nerve.

        Any thoughts/links along this line?
        Rate this comment: 12345

        rlindsl
        05/21/2009
        Posts:19
        Avg Rating:
        4/5

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