Advanced Science (Nov 2024)

Graphene Microelectrode Arrays, 4D Structured Illumination Microscopy, and a Machine Learning Spike Sorting Algorithm Permit the Analysis of Ultrastructural Neuronal Changes During Neuronal Signaling in a Model of Niemann–Pick Disease Type C

  • Meng Lu,
  • Ernestine Hui,
  • Marius Brockhoff,
  • Jakob Träuble,
  • Ana Fernandez‐Villegas,
  • Oliver J Burton,
  • Jacob Lamb,
  • Edward Ward,
  • Philippa J Woodhams,
  • Wadood Tadbier,
  • Nino F Läubli,
  • Stephan Hofmann,
  • Clemens F Kaminski,
  • Antonio Lombardo,
  • Gabriele S Kaminski Schierle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202402967
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 44
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Simultaneously recording network activity and ultrastructural changes of the synapse is essential for advancing understanding of the basis of neuronal functions. However, the rapid millisecond‐scale fluctuations in neuronal activity and the subtle sub‐diffraction resolution changes of synaptic morphology pose significant challenges to this endeavor. Here, specially designed graphene microelectrode arrays (G‐MEAs) are used, which are compatible with high spatial resolution imaging across various scales as well as permit high temporal resolution electrophysiological recordings to address these challenges. Furthermore, alongside G‐MEAs, an easy‐to‐implement machine learning algorithm is developed to efficiently process the large datasets collected from MEA recordings. It is demonstrated that the combined use of G‐MEAs, machine learning (ML) spike analysis, and 4D structured illumination microscopy (SIM) enables monitoring the impact of disease progression on hippocampal neurons which are treated with an intracellular cholesterol transport inhibitor mimicking Niemann–Pick disease type C (NPC), and show that synaptic boutons, compared to untreated controls, significantly increase in size, leading to a loss in neuronal signaling capacity.

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