4.8 Article

Enhancement of Thermoplasmonic Neural Modulation Using a Gold Nanorod-Immobilized Polydopamine Film

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 21, Pages 24122-24132

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.2c03289

Keywords

polydopamine; photothermal effects; plasmonic resonance; gold nanorods; neural interface

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation [NRF-2018R1A2A1A05022604, NRF2021R1A2B5B03001764]
  2. Korean government

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This study introduces a method to inhibit neural activities using plasmonic gold nanoparticles and polydopamine through photothermal effects. The results show that immobilizing gold nanorods on the polydopamine film allows for more efficient photothermal effects and neural activity inhibition.
Photothermal neural activity inhibition has emerged as a minimally invasive neuromodulation technology with submillimeter precision. One of the techniques involves the utilization of plasmonic gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) to modulate neural activity by photothermal effects (thermoplasmonics). A surface modification technique is often required to integrate AuNPs onto the neural interface. Here, polydopamine (pDA), a multifunctional adhesive polymer with a wide light absorption spectrum, is introduced both as a primer layer for the immobilization of gold nanorods (GNRs) on the neural interface and as an additional photothermal agent by absorbing near-infrared red (NIR) lights for more efficient photothermal effects. First, the optical and photothermal properties of pDA as well as the characteristics of GNRs attached onto the pDA film are investigated for the optimized photothermal neural interface. Due to the covalent bonding between GNR surfaces and pDA, GNRs immobilized on pDA showed strong attachment onto the surface, yielding a more stable photothermal platform. Lastly, when photothermal neural stimulation was applied to the primary rat hippocampal neurons, the substrate with GNRs immobilized on the pDA film allowed more laser power-efficient photothermal neuromodulation as well as photothermal cell death. This study suggests the feasibility of using pDA as a surface modification material for developing a photothermal platform for the inhibition of neural activities.

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