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research article

Carbon nanotubes might improve neuronal performance by favouring electrical shortcuts

Cellot, Giada
•
Cilia, Emanuele
•
Cipollone, Sara
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2009
Nature Nanotechnology

Carbon nanotubes have been applied in several areas of nerve tissue engineering to probe and augment cell behaviour, to label and track subcellular components, and to study the growth and organization of neural networks. Recent reports show that nanotubes can sustain and promote neuronal electrical activity in networks of cultured cells, but the ways in which they affect cellular function are still poorly understood. Here, we show, using single-cell electrophysiology techniques, electron microscopy analysis and theoretical modelling, that nanotubes improve the responsiveness of neurons by forming tight contacts with the cell membranes that might favour electrical shortcuts between the proximal and distal compartments of the neuron. We propose the 'electrotonic hypothesis' to explain the physical interactions between the cell and nanotube, and the mechanisms of how carbon nanotubes might affect the collective electrical activity of cultured neuronal networks. These considerations offer a perspective that would allow us to predict or engineer interactions between neurons and carbon nanotubes.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/NNANO.2008.374
Web of Science ID

WOS:000263492500018

PubMed ID

19197316

Author(s)
Cellot, Giada
Cilia, Emanuele
Cipollone, Sara
Rancic, Vladimir
Sucapane, Antonella
Giordani, Silvia
Gambazzi, Luca
Markram, Henry  
Grandolfo, Micaela
Scaini, Denis
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Date Issued

2009

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Published in
Nature Nanotechnology
Volume

4

Start page

126

End page

133

Subjects

Propagating Action-Potentials

•

Prefrontal Cortical-Neurons

•

Pyramidal Neurons

•

Apical Dendrites

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Ca2+ Channels

•

Growth

•

Functionalization

•

Brain

•

Microelectrodes

•

Nanotechnology

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LNMC  
Available on Infoscience
November 30, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/60459
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