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  4. A polymer-based interface restores light sensitivity in rat blind retinas
 
conference poster not in proceedings

A polymer-based interface restores light sensitivity in rat blind retinas

Mete, Maurizio
•
Pertile, Grazia
•
Ghezzi, Diego  
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2013
Annual Meeting of The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

Purpose: Sight restoration is one of the new frontiers for prosthetic devices that enable the electrical stimulation of neurons. In particular, diseases that affect the retinal pigment epithelium and photoreceptors but preserve the inner retinal layers are preferential targets for implantation of visual prostheses. We recently discovered that primary neurons can be successfully grown onto a transparent photovoltaic organic polymer and electrically stimulated by light. This result encouraged us to test the efficacy of this method in retinas explanted from albino rats with reproducibly induced photoreceptor degeneration due to light damage. Methods: We investigated the ability of the polymer layer to restore light sensitivity in retinas explanted from albino rats with a light-induced degeneration of the photoreceptor layer. Acutely dissected retinas were placed on the organic polymer in a sub-retinal configuration (i.e., external layers in contact with the polymer). Light stimulation of the degenerate retina was observed by monitoring multi-unit activity and field potentials with an extracellular electrode positioned in the retinal ganglion cell layer. Results: Multi-unit activity recordings showed that a light stimulus 16-fold lower than the safe limit for pulsed illumination elicited intense spiking activity in degenerate retinas placed on polymer-coated substrates to levels indistinguishable from those recorded in control retinas. Moreover, to evaluate the efficiency of the interface, a dose-response analysis of spiking activity versus light intensity were performed in degenerate retinas. Spiking activity was observed in degenerate retinas over the polymer with a response threshold below 0.3 μW/mm2, a linear increase in a range corresponding to daylight irradiance, and a response saturation above 100 μW/mm2 (considered the safe limit for chronic illumination). A 4-fold increase in the amplitude of the light response at saturation and a significant left shift of the dose-response curves were obtained in retinas placed over the polymer-coated interface respect to degenerate retinas on glass substrates. Conclusions: Our finding indicate that the interface fully mimicks functional photoreceptors in activating the processing of the inner retina and is able to rescue normal light sensitivity. These results broaden the possibility of developing a new generation of fully organic prosthetic devices for sub-retinal implants.

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Type
conference poster not in proceedings
Author(s)
Mete, Maurizio
Pertile, Grazia
Ghezzi, Diego  
Antognazza, Maria Rosa
Maccarone, Rita
Lanzarini, Erica
Martino, Nicola
Bisti, Silvia
Lanzani, Guglielmo
Benfenati, Fabio
Date Issued

2013

URL

URL

http://iovs.arvojournals.org/article.aspx?articleid=2145997&resultClick=1
Editorial or Peer reviewed

NON-REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
LNE  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
Annual Meeting of The Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO)

Seattle, Washington, USA

May 5-9, 2013

Available on Infoscience
July 24, 2015
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/116595
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