Design Parameters and Human Biocompatibility Assessment Protocols for Organic Semiconducting Neural Interfaces: Toward a Printed Artificial Retina with Color Vision

Author:

Sherwood Connor P.123,Crovador Rafael123,Posar Jessie A.45ORCID,Brichta Nathan45,Simunovic Matthew P.67,Louie Fiona8,Dastoor Paul C.23,Brichta Alan M.12,Cairney Julie M.45,Holmes Natalie P.45,Lim Rebecca12,Griffith Matthew J.2345

Affiliation:

1. School of Biomedical Sciences and Pharmacy University of Newcastle Callaghan NSW 2308 Australia

2. Brain Neuromodulation Program Hunter Medical Research Institute New Lambton Heights NSW 2305 Australia

3. Centre for Organic Electronics University of Newcastle Callaghan NSW 2308 Australia

4. School of Aerospace Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering University of Sydney Camperdown NSW 2006 Australia

5. Australian Centre for Microscopy and Microanalysis The University of Sydney Camperdown NSW 2006 Australia

6. Save Sight Institute University of Sydney Camperdown NSW 2006 Australia

7. Retinal Unit Sydney Eye Hospital Sydney NSW 2000 Australia

8. John Hunter Hospital New Lambton Heights NSW 2305 Australia

Abstract

AbstractOrganic semiconductors have emerged as promising neural interfacing materials due to their innate biocompatibility, soft mechanical properties, and mixed electron/ion conduction. One exciting application is their use as artificial photosensors for retinal prostheses via optically induced neuromodulation. In this study, the optoelectronic and neural interfacing properties of six organic semiconductor polymers and small molecules, split into donor/acceptor pairs that form promising candidates for a trichromatic artificial retina that closely mimics the native response of the human eye are presented. The biocompatibility of these materials using primary human retinal cell cultures by systematic measurement of both cell viability and morphological analysis of retinal ganglion cell neurite elongation over time is investigated. Comparable cell viability between human retinal cell cultures established on all the organic semiconductors and a glass control, which is a standard measurement for biocompatibility in materials science is observed. In contrast, differences in the morphological biocompatibility between the organic semiconductor materials and glass control are detected by analyzing neurite elongation with specific immunomarkers. The difference in the two results has implications for the future assessment of material biocompatibility for bioelectronics, and optimal methodology for assessing morphological biocompatibility in neural interface devices is discussed.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials

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