Neuronal cultures are a good model for studying emerging brain stimulation techniques via their effect on single neurons or a population of neurons. Presented here are different methods for stimulation of patterned neuronal cultures by an electric field produced directly by bath electrodes or induced by a time-varying magnetic field.
A neuron will fire an action potential when its membrane potential exceeds a certain threshold. In typical activity of the brain, this occurs as a result of chemical inputs to its synapses. However, neurons can also be excited by an imposed electric field. In particular, recent clinical applications activate neurons by creating an electric field externally. It is therefore of interest to investigate how the neuron responds to the external field and what causes the action potential. Fortunately, precise and controlled application of an external electric field is possible for embryonic neuronal cells that are excised, dissociated and grown in cultures. This allows the investigation of these questions in a highly reproducible system.
In this paper some of the techniques used for controlled application of external electric field on neuronal cultures are reviewed. The networks can be either one dimensional, i.e. patterned in linear forms or allowed to grow on the whole plane of the substrate, and thus two dimensional. Furthermore, the excitation can be created by the direct application of electric field via electrodes immersed in the fluid (bath electrodes) or by inducing the electric field using the remote creation of magnetic pulses.
The interaction between neurons and external electric fields has fundamental implications as well as practical ones. While it is known since the times of Volta that an externally applied electric field can excite tissue, the mechanisms responsible for the production of a resultant action potential in neurons are only recently starting to be unraveled 1,2,3,4. This includes finding answers to questions regarding the mechanism that causes depolarization of membrane potential, the role of membrane properties and of ion channels, and even the region in the neuron that responds to the electric field 2,5. Therapeutic neurostimulation 6,7,8,9,10 methodologies are particularly dependent on this information, which can be crucial for targeting the afflicted areas and for understanding the outcome of the therapy. Such understanding can also help in developing treatment protocols and new approaches for stimulation of different areas in the brain.
Measuring the interaction within the in vivo brain adds an important component to this understanding, but is hampered by the imprecision and low controllability of measurements within the skull. In contrast, measurements in cultures can easily be performed in high volume with high precision, excellent signal to noise performance and a high degree of reproducibility and of control. Using cultures a large variety of neuronal properties of collective network behavior can be elucidated 11,12,13,14,15,16. Similarly, this well controlled system is expected be highly efficient in elucidating the mechanism by which other stimulation methods work, for example how channel opening during optical stimulation in optogenetically active neurons 17,18,19 is responsible for creating action potential.
Here the focus is on describing the development and understanding of tools that can efficiently excite the neuron via an external electric field. In this paper we describe the preparation of two-dimensional and one-dimensional patterned hippocampal cultures, stimulation using different configurations and orientation of a directly applied electric field by bath electrodes, and finally stimulation of two-dimensional and patterned one-dimensional cultures by a time-varying magnetic field, which induces an electric field 5,20,21.
Ethics Statement: Procedures involving animal handling were done in accordance with the guidelines of the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) of the Weizmann Institute of Science, and the appropriate Israeli law. The Weizmann Institute is accredited by the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care International (AAALAC). The Weizmann Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee approved this study, conducted with hippocampal neurons.
1. Preparation of Two-dimensional (2D) and One-dimensional (1D) Hippocampal Cultures
2. Electric Stimulation of Cultures
NOTE: The basic setup for electric stimulation is shown in Figure 1. A cover slip on which the neuronal culture has been grown for about 14 days is placed in a Petri dish under a fluorescence microscope. Electrical activity of the neurons is imaged using calcium sensitive dyes while a voltage is applied via two pairs of bath electrodes that are positioned outside the culture. The electrodes are driven by a signal generator whose output is amplified by a dual channel amplifier. Voltage control for stimulation is preferred over the more standard current control25,26 because the electric field vectors are determined directly, thus enabling straightforward vector addition and combination. This does require a careful check of the uniformity of the electric field, which can be performed over the whole sample for the case of voltage control. When using voltage control care should be taken to avoid any ground loops and the homogeneity of the electric field should be verified (see 2.2 below).
3. Magnetic Stimulation of Cultures
Note: The basic setup for magnetic stimulation is shown in Figure 2. On top right is shown an inverted fluorescence microscope that is used to image calcium sensitive dyes in the neurons. The magnetic coil (blue circles) is positioned about 5 mm concentrically above a neuronal ring culture, (blue outline). A pickup coil (red circle) on the circumference of the Petri dish monitors the voltage induced by the magnetic pulse. On the top left is shown the measured dynamics of the magnetic stimulator (MS) coil with a capacitor voltage load of 5,000 kV, as integrated from the pickup coil. The induced electric field (calculated for a ring radius of 14 mm) is depicted in green while the magnetic field is depicted in blue. On the bottom are shown images of the neuronal culture. At bottom left is a bright field image of a patterned 24-mm coverslip. The white areas are the neurons. The photographed pattern consists of concentric ring cultures with different radii. At the bottom right is a zoom onto a short segment of the rings, showing individual neurons. For a scale, the rings' width is about 200 µm.
The protocol presented allows for easy patterning of neuronal cultures. When it is combined with several methods we developed for stimulation, it enables to make measurements of some intrinsic neuron properties such as Chronaxie and Rheobase5, to compare properties of healthy and diseased neurons27, to find optimal ways to stimulate cultures as a function of their structure and many more novel approaches. Some examples are presented in the next figures.
Figure 3 shows the 1D patterned configurations that are etched into the bio-rejection layer. Thin lines of about 170 µm width are typically inscribed that can, for example, be concentric rings with varying radii (Figure 3A) or parallel lines, typically ~ 11 mm long (Figure 3B).
The top panel of Figure 4 shows a typical picture of fluorescent activity in the culture, taken with a charge-coupled device (CCD) and showing an image of fluorescently labeled neurons in a 2D culture. In this example three different ROIs are shown, marked in black, green and red. Integrated fluorescence intensity traces are shown in the bottom panel of Figure 4, measured in these three different ROIs (traces are in the corresponding color of the ROIs). As the inset shows, within the 200 ms resolution of the frame acquisition time at which this particular data was taken, all the neurons in the three different ROIs burst simultaneously.
The basic apparatus used for stimulation by a uni-directional, constant electric field is shown in Figure 5A. The electrode wires are immersed in the recording medium, about 1 mm above the neuronal culture. The basic pulse shape used for electric stimulation is shown in Figure 5B. When this voltage pulse is applied it creates a constant electric field that flips its orientation by 180° after half of the cycle. The change in field direction after half a cycle is used to avoid electrolysis and damage to the electrodes. Typical voltages applied to the electrodes are ± 22 V, and the typical pulse duration for stimulation of 2D cultures is in the order of 100 – 500 µs.
To control for any anisotropy in the growth of neurites, we verified that stimulation of 2D cultures is isotropic. By manually rotating the electrodes in all 360° at 15° resolution (Figure 5C) it is seen that there is no preference of orientation for the stimulation. Each color in Figure 5C represents the stimulation of a different culture. The distance from the origin represents the minimal duration needed for stimulation with a constant amplitude. It is evident that, to a good approximation, 2D cultures do not have a preferred orientation for electric stimulation.
Since the single pair of electrodes is limited in having one defined direction for the field (though it can be flipped), we developed an apparatus for electric stimulation with two pairs of electrodes (Figure 6A). A schematic of the culture (grey circular background, darker spots are the cell bodies) and of the electrodes (parallel thick lines) is shown in Figure 6B. When the waveforms, shown as blue and green inserts in Figure 6B, are cosine and sine waves and are applied together then a rotating E vector field is produced. When the voltage pulses are square, have different amplitudes and have zero phase lag between them then they create a constant field with the desired orientation determined by the relative amplitude between the two pairs of electrodes. This electric rotation is an obvious improvement over the manual, mechanical rotation that was used to obtain the angular distribution of stimulation strengths in Figure 5C. Of course, as Figure 6C shows, it is also possible to use this configuration to excite only one fixed direction, possibly as a control, by activating only one pair of electrodes.
These configurations were used to excite 2D neuronal cultures with either a rotating field or a fixed-angle field, with the same root mean square (RMS) voltage and then to compare the pulse duration needed to excite the culture when the amplitude is fixed. We found that when using a rotating electric field with a constant amplitude of ± 22 V, an average duration of 150 ± 14 µs was needed to achieve stimulation, while with a single direction electric field an average duration of 290 ± 30 µs was needed. The ratio between the durations needed for exciting the culture with a rotating versus a fixed-angle field is therefore 0.53 ± 0.02.
Since in a 2D culture the axons extend in all directions, the rotating field is able to excite many of the axons. In contrast, with the single orientation field there are only few axons oriented in that specific angle and axonal excitation is not achieved. When the duration is increased, there is the possibility of exciting other parts of the neuron as well, in particular the dendrites. This is further explained below in describing the Chronaxie measurements. The fact that much shorter durations are needed for excitation of the same culture when using a rotating field is of high importance when using external fields for brain stimulation, since there are often technical limitations on the pulse durations.
An important point is that in a connected network (no synaptic blockers applied) excitation is initiated by a small percent of the neurons, which then excite the rest of the network via synaptic connections. This means that a small number of neurons dominate the measurement. To obtain reproducible and quantitative measurements it was necessary to monitor the full population statistics in the network, which was disconnected by using synaptic blockers. The schematics for the configuration used to monitor the population response during axonal excitations vs. dendritic ones are shown in Figure 7. In Figure 7A a 1D disconnected network is stimulated with the electric field either along the line of the culture (at 0° for axonal stimulation) or perpendicular to the line of the culture (at 90° for dendritic stimulation) by two pairs of electrodes. As the voltage is increased, more neurons will be stimulated, and this is reflected by the fluorescence intensity, which is proportional to the number of neurons stimulated (see Figure 7B). Increasing voltage amplitudes are used to gradually stimulate the entire culture. Each neuron has a minimal threshold voltage (for a specific pulse duration) that it will respond to, and by the law of large numbers, the distribution of these thresholds is expected to be Gaussian. Therefore, if we look at the number of neurons that responded and plot it against the voltage applied, the distribution will be a cumulative Gaussian distribution, which is an Error function (erf)5. The number of neurons that respond to a specific amplitude of electric field has approximately a Gaussian distribution, and therefore the fluorescence is well described by its integral — an Error function of the amplitude of the stimulating field (Figure 7C).
Figure 7C is used to extract one parameter, the expectation (mean) of the distribution. This is done by fitting a cumulative Gaussian distribution and obtaining the best fit. This expectation is the applied voltage to which 50% of the cells will respond. This process is repeated for several pulse durations (ranging from 100 µs to 4 ms). The mean voltage to which the culture responded is plotted vs. the pulse duration to obtain the Strength-Duration curve. Two sets of measurements were performed. In the first the field was parallel to the pattern, and in the second it was perpendicular to it. It has been previously shown 15,23 that axons align with pattern, while dendrites grow in all directions. This gives two different Strength-Duration curves, which are very useful for obtaining a clear difference between the axonal and dendritic excitation. Full separation to dendritic and axonal contributions is achieved by the known fact that the axonal time constant for excitation is much shorter than dendritic ones 2,3,4.
The Strength-Duration curves are then fit to the Chronaxie decay equation , where Vrh is the Rheobase voltage and C is the Chronaxie. At pulse durations of t<1ms it is the axons that are excited first and cause the neuron to fire, having a lower value for excitation voltage in the Strength-Duration curve. Axonal Chronaxie was calculated to be 110 µs. In striking contrast, for excitation at long durations (t > 1 ms) the dendritic compartment is the source of excitation for the neuron with a dendritic Chronaxie calculated at 900 µs.
The principles underlying stimulation of 2D and 1D cultures with a circular coil are described in Figure 8. To obtain a better understanding of the physical situation, numerical simulations of the magnetic and induced electric fields are produced using the COMSOL package. To stimulate 1D cultures a circular magnetic coil is used, positioned concentrically above the Petri dish. Neurons are grown in circular rings on a round coverslip that is placed inside the Petri dish for recording. In this case the induced electric field can be calculated analytically and is equal to Emax=k1Br, where Emax is the maximum amplitude of the induced electric field and is directed along the tangent of the rings with radius r. B is the amplitude of the magnetic pulse and k1 is a dimensional proportionality constant that can be measured using a pickup coil.
The COMSOL numerical calculation of the magnetic field created by the coil in the 1D culture is shown in the top panel of Figure 8A (red streamlines). In the bottom panel of Figure 8A the calculation is presented for the induced electric field. Stimulation of a 2D culture with a crossed coil configuration is shown in Figure 8B. To stimulate 2D cultures a cross coil was used that produces rotating magnetic fields, positioned with a 2D neuronal culture inside it, placed in a spherical glass container that is filled with recording medium (EM). In this case the induced electric field can no longer be calculated analytically. The cross coil is depicted in the top panel of Figure 8B, with the spherical container placed inside the two coils and the glass coverslip supporting the 2D culture placed in the bottom of the container. For scale, the inner diameter of the inner coil is 65mm. Numerical simulations using COMSOL with the Eddy Currents 3D model are shown in the bottom panel, portraying the electric field induced in the inner surface of the spherical container. A bright field microscope image of a glass coverslip with typical 1D neuronal cultures used for stimulation is shown in Figure 8C. The white lines show neurons on the patterned lines, which are oriented both tangentially and radially for experimental comparison and control on the effect of directionality.
Geometry of the 1D culture plays a big role in determining whether a culture will fire in response to magnetic stimulation. Only 22% of the 1D ring cultures responded to magnetic stimulation. The successful excitation rate strongly depended on the culture's linear length, and as Figure 9A shows, more than 60% of cultures that are longer than 80mm respond to magnetic stimulation. This implies that special conditions are necessary for magnetic response. To investigate this geometric dependence cultures were grown in configurations that are parts of rings – having the same radius but different lengths by patterning them on arcs rather than on complete circles (see Figure 8C)
A comprehensive investigation of the magnetic field thresholds as a function of the radius of 1D ring cultures is shown in Figure 9B. White circles represent experimental measurements of stimulation thresholds, while the color coding denotes the calculated probability to measure an excitation threshold. A stimulation threshold is defined as the weakest field that still elicits a response for a given neuronal culture.
Figure 9B emphasizes the trend that larger rings have lower stimulation thresholds, with a clear inverse correlation between the radius of the rings and the stimulation threshold. For example, the average 14 mm ring responds to magnetic pulses with amplitude of 1.5 T while the average 7 mm ring only responds to 3 T or more. This is expected from the theoretical calculation of the induced electric field, which is depicted as the color coded predicted probability to fire. Indeed, the electric field induced by 3T at a radius of 7mm is equal to that induced by 1.5 T at twice the radius. In summary, the average electric field threshold is 301 ± 128 (standard deviation) V/m, independent of the radius of the ring cultures.
In contrast to the single circular coil, which could not elicit response in 2D cultures, 15 of 30 2D cultures that were stimulated by rotating field magnetic stimulation responded with bursting neuronal excitation. The two independent coils that are positioned perpendicular to each other (Figure 8B) generate rotating magnetic and induced electric fields. Each coil is connected to its own MS, both of which discharge similar currents at a phase lag of 90 degrees. The amplitude of the electric field induced by each of the two coils in the cross coil configuration is plotted in Figure 10A, and the same traces are represented in Figure 10B by a polar representation of the direction and amplitude of the superimposed electric field of both coils. The resulting induced electric field scans 270 degrees of the real space at a maximum field of ~ 270 V/m.
Figure 1: Schematic of the Setup Used for Electrical Stimulation of Neuronal Cultures. The desired signal is produced by a signal generator with two outputs that have no common ground. These signals are amplified to give an output voltage of up to ± 30 V. The electric signals are then fed through two separate pairs of electrodes, stimulating a neuronal culture in two orthogonal and independent directions. Stimulation of neurons can be viewed and monitored by calcium dyes. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Schematic of the Setup Used for Magnetic Stimulation of Neuronal Cultures. A. At top is shown the magnetic coil (blue circles), which is located 5 mm concentrically above the neuronal ring culture, placed in a Petri dish (blue outline). A pickup coil (red circle) positioned on the circumference of the Petri dish measures the voltage induced by the magnetic pulse. At bottom the measured dynamics of the magnetic stimulator coil is shown (using an MS capacitor voltage load of 5,000 kV), as integrated from the pickup coil. Induced electric field (calculated for a ring radius of 14 mm) is depicted in green while the magnetic field is depicted in blue B. An inverted microscope images fluorescent dyes sensitive to calcium transients of neurons reacting to magnetic pulses. C. Neurons grown on a pattern of concentric rings, used for an effective stimulation by the ring magnetic stimulator. D. Bright field microscope image of neurons grown on one line of the pattern. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Examples of Patterns of 1D Neuronal Cultures Used for Orienting the Electric Field with the Direction of Axonal Growth. A. circular pattern is used for the circular magnetic coil, when the induced electric field has a circular orientation. B. Line patterns are used when the induced or direct electric field has a single orientation.
Figure 4: Example Traces of Calcium Transients Imaged During Synchronous Network Bursts. A. An image of neurons that were dyed previous to the experiment with a calcium dye. B. Traces of intensity vs. time of the ROIs in A with the color of the trace representing the color of the border of the ROI in A. A large increase in intensity synchronized within the three ROIs represents a network burst. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Basic Setup for Electric Stimulation, using One Pair of Parallel Bath Electrodes to Determine that 2D Cultures Have no Preferred Orientation of Electric Stimulation. A. Apparatus used for culture stimulation. The electric field is produced by applying voltage to the platinum wire electrodes. The distance between the two wires is 13 mm. B. An example of a voltage signal to be applied on the electrodes in A. The bipolar shape of the pulse helps prevent electrolysis of the recording solution at the electrodes. C. When stimulating a 2D culture in different rotations of the electrodes, there is isotropy of the neuronal response. D. An example of the electric field measurement using the probe described in step 2.2. The electric field is uniform to an error of up to 10%. This figure has been modified from 5. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 6: Electric Stimulation with Two Pairs of Electrodes Allows for Rotation of the Electric Field and for Stimulation in any Desired Angle. A. To produce more complicated shapes of the electric field, two independent electrode pairs are needed. B. Applying a cosine voltage shaped pulse to one electrode and a sine pulse to the second electrode creates a rotating electric field with constant amplitude. C. Applying a square voltage pulse to one pair of the electrodes creates a unidirectional uniform electric field. This figure has been modified from 5. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 7: Network Disconnection by Blocking Synaptic Inputs (as Described in 2.4.2) Enables Observation of the Total Population of Single Cells that are Stimulated by a Given Electric Field. A. By applying different amplitudes of voltage pulses to the two pairs of electrodes, the electric field can be oriented to every angle without the need to manually turn the culture. B. Example recordings of calcium transients with electric stimulation at different applied voltages. Four traces are shown, slightly shifted vertically to allow viewing. Voltage values are written beneath the blue traces. C. When applying a constant duration of electric field, the number of neurons that will fire in response to the electric field has a cumulative distribution function (CDF) that is a cumulative Gaussian distribution (or an erf function) as a function of the amplitude of the voltage (which is proportional to the field strength). D. An example of a Strength-Duration curve obtained while employing this protocol. This figure has been modified from 5. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 8: Magnetic Coil Configuration and Calculation of the Induced Electric Field. A. At top is a circular coil (blue circles) is positioned 5 mm above one-dimensional neuronal ring cultures (blue disk). The rings are parallel to and concentric with the coil, which creates a magnetic pulse that is oriented along the red lines. By Faraday's law, the induced electric field lies on planes that are parallel to the coil along rings concentric with it. At bottom is a horizontal cross-section along the plane of the ring cultures. The relative value of the electric field is color-coded, with direction depicted by arrows. Larger rings enclose a larger area of flux and therefore the electric field induced there is higher. B. Image of the cross-coil magnetic stimulator (top) and a simulation of the electric field that is induced by it. C. Pattern used to grow neurons which can be stimulated with either a circular electric field or a radial electric field. This figure has been modified from 21,28. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 9: Response of Ring Cultures to Magnetic Field. A. The success rate of stimulation grows with the radius of the culture. The error bars represent the standard error (SE). B. The relation between ring size and magnetic field strength is depicted. The probability to excite the culture is color coded. Indeed most successful excitations of cultures lie in the overlap between the experimentally accessible phase space (white rectangle) and the high probability region (red). This figure has been modified from 21. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 10: Rotating Magnetic Field Setup Field. A. In order to induce a rotating electric field when stimulating with the cross-coil magnetic stimulator, a phase shift of 90 degrees is needed between the two coils. Shown is the electric field induced in a pickup coil positioned on 2 neighboring wings of the clover leaf coil. The coils were driven separately by 2 commercial stimulators. B. A reconstruction, using the curves shown in A, of the resultant electric field amplitude and direction during a pulse of the clover leaf coil. This figure has been modified from 21,28. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
1D patterning is an important tool that can be used for a variety of applications. For example, we have used 1D patterning for creating logic gates from neuronal cultures 29 and more recently to measure the Chronaxie and Rheobase of rat hippocampal neurons 5, and the slowing down of signal propagation velocity of firing activity in Down syndrome hippocampal neurons compared to the wild type (WT) hippocampal neurons 27. The suggested protocol for 1D patterning is robust and it is easy to form any desired pattern. We suggest to observe the 1D culture before measurements to be aware of any possible disconnections of the network, which may affect its function.
Chemical patterning of neuronal configurations has a distinguished history 30,31,32. We found that our approach yields similar results to chemical patterning, yet they are more robust and easier to attain. Recently the option for microfluidic patterning of neurons has become an interesting alternative to the approach we offer, with comparable simplicity and ease of use 33,34. The microfluidic approach is being used in our lab in parallel with the etching method described here.
As we showed 5, 2D cultures have no preferred orientation and their stimulation is isotropic and does not depend on the orientation of the field applied. Shorter durations are needed for stimulation of 2D cultures when the field is rotating. In contrast, 1D cultures are very dependent on the orientation of the field. When the field is oriented with the pattern (and therefore with the direction of axonal growth), the duration of a fixed-amplitude field needed for stimulation is much shorter than when the field is oriented perpendicular to the pattern. Similarly, if the duration is kept constant then the field needed to excite the culture is smaller if the field and pattern are parallel. When stimulating perpendicularly, the field pulse needs to be much longer (in the order of a millisecond when the network is disconnected), and then mainly the dendrites are stimulated. When electric fields (either direct or induced by a magnetic field) are used for brain stimulation, this is of extreme importance. If the brain area targeted is known to have bundles of axons, these axons can be excited by orienting the field in their direction and then need less power or a shorter duration of the field for stimulation. If the brain region targeted does not have preferred orientation, then a rotating field is more efficient for stimulation. If dendrites are the target of the stimulation, longer pulses are more effective.
Magnetic fields can stimulate neuronal activity when a magnetic pulse induces an electric field that excites neurons. Because currently achievable magnetic pulses are microseconds in duration, dendrites, whose response time is of the order of milliseconds, are not expected to be sensitive to magnetic stimulation. In contrast, axons, whose response time is faster, are the target of stimulation 2,3. The response of axons to electric excitation is maximal when they are parallel to the electric field and diminishes when they are perpendicular to it 1,35; therefore, in magnetic excitation, we strive to set up systems where the induced electric field orients parallel to the targeted axons. Therefore, when stimulating a 1D ring, the field should be oriented parallel to the axons, and the size of the ring determines the threshold for stimulation. Similar for the direct stimulation by bath electrodes, to stimulate a 2D culture, a rotating induced electric field is much more efficient.
The combination of patterning of neurons and of external excitation with electric or magnetic field is a potent technology with many possible future applications. Chronaxie and Rheobase, as well as threshold for activation and activation propagation dynamics and velocities are all parameters that are telling of a neuronal culture's intrinsic properties. In particular, therapeutic treatments and the effect of drugs or pharmacological treatment can be immediately tested directly on the neurons. This would allow an efficient survey of both disease model neurons and of protocols for TMS stimulation. On a more conceptual direction, the ability to stimulate neuronal cultures precisely leads to novel possibilities regarding the information processing aspects of neural configurations, and allow us to envisage micro printed circuitry that combines electronic stimulation with living neuronal networks to provide new computational devices and novel brain interfacing devices.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors thank Ofer Feinerman, Fred Wolf, Menahem Segal, Andreas Neef and Eitan Reuveny for very helpful discussions. The authors thank Ilan Breskin and Jordi Soriano for developing early versions of the technology. The authors thank Tsvi Tlusty and Jean-Pierre Eckmann for help with the theoretical concepts. This research was supported by the Minerva Foundation, the Ministry of Science and Technology, Israel, and by Israel Science Foundation grant 1320/09 and the Bi-National Science Foundation grant 2008331.
APV | Sigma-Aldrich | A8054 | Disconnect the network. Mentioned in Section 2.4.2 |
B27 supp | Gibco | 17504-044 | Plating medium. Mentioned in Section 1.1.1 |
bicuculline | Sigma-Aldrich | 14343 | Disconnect the network . Mentioned in Section 2.4.2 |
Borax (sodium tetraborate decahydrate) | Sigma-Aldrich | S9640 | Borate buffer. Mentioned in Section 1.1.2 |
Boric acid | Frutarom LTD | 5550710 | Borate buffer. Mentioned in Section 1.1.2 |
CaCl2 , 1M | Fluka | 21098 | Extracellular recording solution . Mentioned in Section 1.5.2 |
CNQX | Sigma-Aldrich | C239 | Disconnect the network . Mentioned in Section 2.4.2 |
COMSOL | COMSOL Inc | Multiphysics 3.5 | Numerical simulation. Mentioned in Section 3.5.2 |
D-(+)-Glucose, 1M | Sigma-Aldrich | 65146 | Plating medium, Extracellular recording solution . Mentioned in Section 1.1.1 1.5.2 |
D-PBS | Sigma-Aldrich | D8537 | Cell Cultures. Mentioned in Section 1.2.4 1.2.6 |
FCS(FBS) | Gibco | 12657-029 | Plating medium. Mentioned in Section 1.1.1 |
Fibronectin | Sigma-Aldrich | F1141 | Bio Coating. Mentioned in Section 1.2.6 |
Fluo4, AM | Life technologies | F14201 | Imaging of spontaneous or evoked activity . Mentioned in Section 1.5.1 1.5.3 1.5.5 |
FUDR | Sigma-Aldrich | F0503 | Changing medium. Mentioned in Section 1.4.1 |
Gentamycin | Sigma-Aldrich | G1272 | Plating medium, Changing medium, Final medium. Mentioned in Section 1.1.1 |
GlutaMAX 100X | Gibco | 35050-038 | Plating medium, Changing medium, Final medium. Mentioned in Section 1.1.1 |
Hepes, 1M | Sigma-Aldrich | H0887 | Extracellular recording solution . Mentioned in Section 1.5.2 |
HI HS | BI | 04-124-1A | Plating medium, Changing medium, Final medium. Mentioned in Section 1.1.1 1.4.1 1.4.2 |
KCl, 3M | Merck | 1049361000 | Extracellular recording solution. Mentioned in Section 1.5.2 |
Laminin | Sigma-Aldrich | L2020 | Bio Coating. Mentioned in Section 1.2.6 |
MEM x 1 | Gibco | 21090-022 | Plating medium, Changing medium, Final medium. Mentioned in Section 1.4.1 1.4.2 |
MgCl2 , 1M | Sigma-Aldrich | M1028 | Extracellular recording solution. Mentioned in Section 1.5.2 |
NaCl, 4M | Bio-Lab | 19030591 | Extracellular recording solution . Mentioned in Section 1.5.2 |
Octadecanethiol | Sigma-Aldrich | 01858 | Cleaning Cr-Au coated coverslips (1D cultures). Mentioned in Section 1.2.3 |
Pluracare F108 NF Prill | BASF Corparation | 50475278 | Bio-Rejection Coating, Bio Coating. Mentioned in Section 1.2.4 1.2.6 |
Poly-L-lysine 0.01% solution | Sigma-Aldrich | P47075 | Promote cell division. Mentioned in Section 1.1.4 |
Sucrose, 1M | Sigma-Aldrich | S1888 | Extracellular recording solution . Mentioned in Section 1.5.2 |
Thiol | Sigma-Aldrich | 1858 | Bio-Rejection Coating. Mentioned in Section 1.2.3 |
URIDINE | Sigma-Aldrich | U3750 | Changing medium. Mentioned in Section 1.4.1 |
Sputtering machine | AJA International, Inc | ATC Orion-5Series | coating glass with thin layers of metal. Mentioned in Section 1.2.2 |
Pen plotter | Hewlett Packard | HP 7475A | Etching of pattern to the coated coverslip. Mentioned in Section 1.2.5 |
Electrodes wires | A-M Systems, Carlsborg WA | 767000 | Electric stimulation of neuronal cultures. Mentioned in Section 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4.5 |
Signal generator | BKPrecision | 4079 | Shaping of the electric signal. Mentioned in Section 2.3 |
Amplifier | Homemade | Voltage amplification of the signal from the signal generator to the electrodes. Mentioned in Section 2.3 | |
Power supply | Matrix | MPS-3005 LK-3 | Power supply to the sputtering machine. Mentioned in Section 1.2.2.3 |
Transcranial magnetic stimulation | Magstim, Spring Gardens, UK | Rapid 2 | Magnetic stimulation of neuronal culture. Mentioned in Section 3.1 3.3 3.4 |
Epoxy | Cognis | Versamid 140 | Casting of homemade coils. Mentioned in Section 3.4 |
Epoxy | Shell | EPON 815 | Casting of homemade coils. Mentioned in Section 3.4 |
Platinum wires 0.005'' thick; A-M Systems, | Carlsborg WA | 767000 | Electric stimulation of neuronal cultures. Mentioned in Section 2.1 |
Circular magnetic coil | Homemade | Magnetic stimulation of neuronal culture. Mentioned in Section 3.3 | |
WaveXpress SW | B&K Precision | Waveform editing software. Mentioned in Section 2.1.32 | |
Xion Ultra 897 | Andor | Sensitive EMCCD camera. Mentioned in Section 2.4.4 |