The correct human brain function is dependent on the activity of non‐neuronal cells called astrocytes. The bioelectrical properties of astrocytes in vitro do not closely resemble those displayed in vivo and the former are incapable of generating action potential; thus, reliable approaches in vitro for noninvasive electrophysiological recording of astrocytes remain challenging for biomedical engineering. Here it is found that primary astrocytes grown on a device formed by a forest of randomly oriented gold coated‐silicon nanowires, resembling the complex structural and functional phenotype expressed by astrocytes in vivo. The device enables noninvasive extracellular recording of the slow‐frequency oscillations generated by differentiated astrocytes, while flat electrodes failed on recording signals from undifferentiated cells. Pathophysiological concentrations of extracellular potassium, occurring during epilepsy and spreading depression, modulate the power of slow oscillations generated by astrocytes. A reliable approach to study the role of astrocytes function in brain physiology and pathologies is presented.
The direct integration of disordered arranged and randomly oriented silicon nanowires (SiNWs) into ultraflexible and transferable electronic circuits for electrochemical biosensing applications is proposed. The working electrode (WE) of a three-electrode impedance device, fabricated on a polyimide (PI) film, is modified with SiNWs covered by a thin Au layer and functionalized to bind the sensing element. The biosensing behavior is investigated through the ligand-receptor binding of biotin-avidin system. Impedance measurements show a very efficient detection of the avidin over a broad range of concentrations from hundreds of micromolar down to the picomolar values. The impedance response is modeled through a simple equivalent circuit, which takes into account the unique WE morphology and its modification with successive layers of biomolecules. This approach of exploiting highly disordered SiNW ensemble in biosensing proves to be very promising for the following three main reasons: first, the system morphology allows high sensing performance; second, these nanostructures can be built via scalable and transferable fabrication methodology allowing an easy integration on non-conventional substrates; third, reliable modeling of the sensing response can be developed by considering the morphological and surface characteristics over an ensemble of disordered NWs rather than over individual NWs.
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