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Volcano-shaped microelectrodes (nanovolcanoes) functionalized with nanopatterned self-assembled monolayers have recently been demonstrated to report cardiomyocyte action potentials after gaining spontaneous intracellular access. These nanovolcanoes exhibit recording characteristics similar to those of state-of-the-art micro-nanoelectrode arrays that use electroporation as an insertion mechanism. In this study, we investigated whether the use of electroporation improves the performance of nanovolcano arrays in terms of action potential amplitudes, recording durations, and yield. Experiments with neonatal rat cardiomyocyte monolayers grown on nanovolcano arrays demonstrated that electroporation pulses with characteristics derived from analytical models increased the efficiency of nanovolcano recordings, as they enabled multiple on-demand registration of intracellular action potentials with amplitudes as high as 62 mV and parallel recordings in up to ~76% of the available channels. The performance of nanovolcanoes showed no dependence on the presence of functionalized nanopatterns, indicating that the tip geometry itself is instrumental for establishing a tight seal at the cell-electrode interface, which ultimately determines the quality of recordings. Importantly, the use of electroporation permitted the recording of attenuated cardiomyocyte action potentials during consecutive days at identical sites, indicating that nanovolcano recordings are nondestructive and permit long-term on-demand recordings from excitable cardiac tissues. Apart from demonstrating that less complex manufacturing processes can be used for next-generation nanovolcano arrays, the finding that the devices are suitable for performing on-demand recordings of electrical activity from multiple sites of excitable cardiac tissues over extended periods of time opens the possibility of using the devices not only in basic research but also in the context of comprehensive drug testing.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41378-020-0178-7 | DOI Listing |
Brain Stimul
September 2025
Department of Philosophy, University of Milan, Milan, via Festa Del Perdono, 7, 20122, Italy; Cognition in Action (CIA) Unit, PHILAB, University of Milan, Via Santa Sofia, 9, 20122, Italy. Electronic address:
Background: To investigate covert motor processes, transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies often use motor-evoked potentials (MEPs) as a proxy for inferring the state of motor representations. Typically, these studies test motor representations of actions that can be produced by the isolated contraction of one muscle, limiting both the number of recorded muscles and the complexity of tested actions. Furthermore, univariate analyses treat MEPs from different muscles as independent, overlooking potentially meaningful intermuscular relationships encoded in MEPs amplitude patterns at the single-trial level.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDrug Dev Res
September 2025
Cancer Biology Department, Pharmacology Unit, National Cancer Institute (NCI), Cairo University, Cairo, Egypt.
Herein, and based on the pharmacophoric features of doxorubicin (Dox); 133 steroids were screened to assess their ability to act as TOP II inhibitors for the discovery of those with promising anticancer activity. The cytotoxic inhibitory concentration 50 (IC) of the investigated steroids was determined against H1299, CaCo2, MDA-MB-468, and FaDu cancer cell lines and compared to Dox. Fluticasone propionate and fusidic acid exhibited the most potent antiproliferative effect against the MDA-MB-468 with IC values of 10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChaos
September 2025
School of Science, Jiangxi University of Science and Technology, Ganzhou 341000, China.
Synaptic plasticity is of great significance for understanding the leaning and memory processes in different brain regions since it determines the synchronized firing activities of neurons. A volatility-switchable memristor-coupled heterogeneous neuron model is proposed to explore the effects of the synaptic plasticity on the synchronous dynamics of coupled neurons in different brain regions. With the increment of the non-volatility, the critical coupling strength of synchronization between two heterogeneous neurons decreases in a power-law relationship with the character parameter of the memristor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe leading cause of epilepsy-related mortality is sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP), resulting from seizure-induced cardiorespiratory arrest by mechanisms that remain unresolved. Mutations in ion channel genes expressed in both brain and heart represent SUDEP risk factors because they can disrupt neural and cardiac rhythms, providing a unified explanation for seizures and lethal arrhythmias. However, the relative contributions of brain-driven mechanisms, heart-intrinsic processes, and seizures to cardiac dysfunction in epilepsy remain unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStrategies to stimulate the regeneration of neurons in the adult central nervous system can offer universal solutions for neurodegenerative diseases. Taking lessons from naturally regenerating species, such as the zebrafish, we have previously shown that vector-mediated expression of proneural transcription factors can stimulate neurogenesis from the resident Müller glia (MG) population in the adult mouse retina, both and . To bring this closer to translation, we now show that vector-mediated expression of the proneural transcription factor ASCL1 can reprogram adult macaque MG into functional neurons.
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