4.8 Article

Ti3C2Tx MXene Flakes for Optical Control of Neuronal Electrical Activity

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 9, Pages 14662-14671

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.1c04431

Keywords

Ti3C2Tx MXene; optical; modulation; neurons; dorsal root ganglion

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET1552833, DMR-1740795]
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency [AWD00001593 (416052-5)]
  3. National Institutes of Health [K12HD073945]
  4. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Materials Characterization Facility [MCF-677785]

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Utilizing nanomaterial-assisted photothermal stimulation, Ti3C2Tx (MXene) demonstrates excellent potential as a candidate for remote, non-genetic, optical modulation of neuronal electrical activity with high spatiotemporal resolution. The material's photothermal response, low cytotoxicity, and ease of large-scale synthesis make it a promising tool for modulating electrophysiology at various scales.
Understanding cellular electrical communications in both health and disease necessitates precise subcellular electrophysiological modulation. Nanomaterial-assisted photothermal stimulation was demonstrated to modulate cellular activity with high spatiotemporal resolution. Ideal candidates for such an application are expected to have high absorbance at the near-infrared window, high photothermal conversion efficiency, and straightforward scale-up of production to allow future translation. Here, we demonstrate two-dimensional Ti3C2Tx (MXene) as an outstanding candidate for remote, nongenetic, optical modulation of neuronal electrical activity with high spatiotemporal resolution. Ti3C2Tx's photothermal response measured at the single-flake level resulted in local temperature rises of 2.31 +/- 0.03 and 3.30 +/- 0.02 K for 635 and 808 nm laser pulses (1 ms, 10 mW), respectively. Dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons incubated with Ti3C2Tx film (25 mu g/cm(2)) or Ti3C2Tx flake dispersion (100 mu g/mL) for 6 days did not show a detectable influence on cellular viability, indicating that Ti3C2Tx is noncytotoxic. DRG neurons were photothermally stimulated using Ti3C2Tx films and flakes with as low as tens of microjoules per pulse incident energy (635 nm, 2 mu J for film, 18 mu J for flake) with subcellular targeting resolution. Ti3C2Tx's straightforward and large-scale synthesis allows translation of the reported photothermal stimulation approach in multiple scales, thus presenting a powerful tool for modulating electrophysiology from single-cell to additive manufacturing of engineered tissues.

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