Improvement of sensitivity of the light-addressable potentiometric sensors for the purpose of noninvasive measurement of electrical activity of biological cells

2001 
The possibility of measurement of the electrical activity of neurons by Light-Addressable Potentiometric Sensor (LAPS) is investigated in this article. For the measurement of the extracellular transient of the neural action potential, which is very low, at the surface of a LAPS heterostructure, a simple structure like SiO/sub 2//Si, instead of the conventional Si/sub 3/N/sub 4//SiO/sub 2//Si heterostructure, is studied. The SiO/sub 2/ surface was modified by Poly-L-Ornithine and Laminin (PLOL). Experimental results show that the PLOL coating on the SiO/sub 2/ surface not only prevents the hydration of the SiO/sub 2/ layer and thus enables us to use SiO/sub 2/ only as the insulating layer, but also, provides an efficient culturing of neurons of Lymnaea stagnalis, a kind of sea snail, on the SiO/sub 2/ surface. The PLOL modified SiO/sub 2/ layer of the novel LAPS heterostructure, is kept in contact with the neuron-culture medium for ten days mimicking the maximum cell-culturing period. There is no appreciable change in the sensor response was observed during this period. A DC bias, superimposed by a 2 mV/sub p-p/ and 800 Hz AC was applied to the sensor to simulate an extracellular transient of 2 mV/sub p-p/ to the surface and the response of the sensor shows the possibility of the measurement of the neural action potential by the LAPS.
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