Artifact-free, high-temporal-resolution in vivo opto-electrophysiology with microLED optoelectrodes

Abstract

The combination of in vivo extracellular recording and genetic-engineering-assisted optical stimulation is a powerful tool for the study of neuronal circuits. Precise analysis of complex neural circuits requires high-density integration of multiple cellular-size light sources and recording electrodes. However, high-density integration inevitably introduces stimulation artifact. We present minimal-stimulation-artifact (miniSTAR) µLED optoelectrodes that enable effective elimination of stimulation artifact. A multi-metal-layer structure with a shielding layer effectively suppresses capacitive coupling of stimulation signals. A heavily-boron-doped silicon substrate silences the photovoltaic effect induced from LED illumination. With transient stimulation pulse shaping, we reduced stimulation artifact on miniSTAR µLED optoelectrodes to below 50 µVpp, much smaller than a typical spike detection threshold, at optical stimulation of > 50 mW mm-2 irradiance. We demonstrated high-temporal resolution (< 1 ms) opto-electrophysiology without any artifact-induced signal quality degradation during in vivo experiments. MiniSTAR µLED optoelectrodes will facilitate functional mapping of local circuits and discoveries in the brain.

Publication
Nature Communications
Mihály Vöröslakos
Mihály Vöröslakos
Postdoctoral Researcher

My research interests include translational neuroscience, non-invasive brain stimulation and neuroscience tool development.