Published 2021
| Version v1
Publication
Exploring the Contribution of Thalamic and Hippocampal Input on Cortical Dynamics in a Brain-on-a-Chip Model
Contributors
Description
The huge connectivity of the brain and the cellular diversity, which characterize the neuronal populations in the
different anatomical districts, are considered two of the main
sources originating the complex patterns of electrophysiological
activity. Despite the advancements in neurotechnologies, which
allowed investigating the brain complexity with a high level of
precision, the use of simplified in vitro brain-on-a-chip models
results to be a widespread alternative. In the present work,
we used an in vitro brain-regions-on-a-chip model to explore
the role of thalamic and hippocampal neurons in modulating
the dynamics of cortical ensembles. We recorded the emerging electrophysiological activity by means of Micro-Electrode
Arrays (MEAs) paired with ad hoc polymeric structures in
order to recreate interconnected heterogeneous networks. We
demonstrated that two specific neuronal inputs (thalamic and hippocampal) modulated cortical dynamics differently. The observed
variation in the cortical activity was sustained by a specific reorganization of the functional inhibitory connections with respect to
the cortical homogeneous controls. In perspective, the possibility
to design in vitro specific interconnected brain-regions-on-a-chip
and to record their electrophysiological activity could be an
alternative approach to investigate neurodegenerative pathologies
affecting the connectivity among different neuronal populations
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1050254
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1050254