Author:
Mossink B.,Verboven A.H.A.,van Hugte E.J.H.,Gunnewiek T.M. Klein,Parodi G.,Linda K.,Schoenmaker C.,Kleefstra T.,Kozicz T.,van Bokhoven H.,Schubert D.,Kasri N. Nadif,Frega M.
Abstract
AbstractMicro-electrode arrays (MEAs) are increasingly used to characterize neuronal network activity of human induced pluripotent stem-cell (hiPSC)-derived neurons. Despite their gain in popularity, MEA recordings from hiPSC-derived neuronal networks are not always used to their full potential in respect to experimental design, execution and data analysis. Therefore, we benchmarked the robustness and sensitivity of MEA-derived neuronal activity patterns derived from ten healthy individual control lines. We provide recommendations on experimental design and analysis to achieve standardization. With such standardization, MEAs can be used as a reliable platform to distinguish (disease-specific) network phenotypes. In conclusion, we show that MEAs are a powerful and robust tool to uncover functional neuronal network phenotypes from hiPSC-derived neuronal networks, and provide an important resource to advance the hiPSC field towards the use of MEAs for disease-phenotyping and drug discovery.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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