Research on neural interfaces has historically concentrated on development of systems for the brain; however, there is increasing interest in peripheral nerve interfaces (PNIs) that could provide benefit when peripheral nerve function is compromised, such as for amputees. Efforts focus on designing scalable and high-performance sensory and motor peripheral nervous system interfaces. Current PNIs face several design challenges such as undersampling of signals from the thousands of axons, nerve-fiber selectivity, and device-tissue integration. To improve PNIs, several researchers have turned to tissue engineering. Peripheral nerve tissue engineering has focused on designing regeneration scaffolds that mimic normal nerve extracellular matrix composition, provide advanced microarchitecture to stimulate cell migration, and have mechanical properties like native nerve. By combining PNIs with tissue engineering, the goal is to promote natural axon regeneration into the devices to facilitate close contact with electrodes; in contrast, traditional PNIs rely on insertion or placement of electrodes into or around existing nerve, or do not utilize materials to actively facilitate axon regeneration. This review presents the state-of-the-art of PNIs and nerve tissue engineering, highlights recent approaches to combine neural interface technology and tissue engineering, and addresses remaining challenges with foreign body response.
Neural interfaces are designed to decode motor intent and evoke sensory precepts in amputees. In peripheral nerves, recording movement intent is challenging because motor axons are only a small fraction compared to sensory fibers and are heterogeneously mixed particularly at proximal levels. We previously reported that pain and myelinated axons regenerating through a Y-shaped nerve guide with sealed ends, can be modulated by luminar release of nerve growth factor (NGF) and neurotrophin-3 (NT-3), respectively. Here, we evaluate the differential potency of NGF, glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), pleiotrophin (PTN), and NT-3 in asymmetrically guiding the regeneration of sensory and motor neurons. We report that, in the absence of distal target organs, molecular guidance cues can mediate the growth of electrically conductive fascicles with normal microanatomy. Compared to Y-tube compartments with bovine serum albumin (BSA), GDNF and NGF increased the motor and sensory axon content, respectively. In addition, the sensory to motor ratio was significantly increased by PTN (12.7:1) when compared to a BDNF + GDNF choice. The differential content of motor and sensory axons modulated by selective guidance cues may provide a strategy to better define axon types in peripheral nerve interfaces.
Clinical use of neurally controlled prosthetics has advanced in recent years, but limitations still remain, including lacking fine motor control and sensory feedback. Indwelling multi-electrode arrays, cuff electrodes, and regenerative sieve electrodes have been reported to serve as peripheral neural interfaces, though long-term stability of the nerve-electrode interface has remained a formidable challenge. We recently developed a regenerative multi-electrode interface (REMI) that is able to record neural activity as early as seven days post-implantation. While this activity might represent normal neural depolarization during axonal regrowth, it can also be the result of altered nerve regeneration around the REMI. This study evaluated high-throughput expression levels of 84 genes involved in nerve injury and repair, and the histological changes that occur in parallel to this early neural activity. Animals exhibiting spike activity increased from 29% to 57% from 7 to 14 days following REMI implantation with a corresponding increase in firing rate of 113%. Two weeks after implantation, numbers of neurofilament-positive axons in the control and REMI implanted nerves were comparable, and in both cases the number of myelinated axons was low. During this time, expression levels of genes related to nerve injury and repair were similar in regenerated nerves, both in the presence or absence of the electrode array. Together, these results indicate that the early neural activity is intrinsic to the regenerating axons, and not induced by the REMI neurointerface.
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