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Metabolite-induced in vivo fabrication of substrate-free organic bioelectronics
Author(s) -
Xenofon Strakosas,
Hanne Biesmans,
Tobias Abrahamsson,
Karin Hellman,
Malin Silverå Ejneby,
Mary J. Donahue,
Peter Ekström,
Fredrik Ek,
Marios Savvakis,
Martin Hjort,
David Bliman,
Mathieu Linares,
Caroline Lindholm,
Eleni Stavrinidou,
Jennifer Y. Gerasimov,
Daniel T. Simon,
Roger Olsson,
Magnus Berggren
Publication year - 2023
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.adc9998
Subject(s) - bioelectronics , interfacing , nanotechnology , substrate (aquarium) , organic electronics , materials science , electronics , conductive polymer , microelectrode , electrode , chemistry , polymer , computer science , biosensor , transistor , electrical engineering , biology , engineering , ecology , composite material , voltage , computer hardware
Interfacing electronics with neural tissue is crucial for understanding complex biological functions, but conventional bioelectronics consist of rigid electrodes fundamentally incompatible with living systems. The difference between static solid-state electronics and dynamic biological matter makes seamless integration of the two challenging. To address this incompatibility, we developed a method to dynamically create soft substrate-free conducting materials within the biological environment. We demonstrate in vivo electrode formation in zebrafish and leech models, using endogenous metabolites to trigger enzymatic polymerization of organic precursors within an injectable gel, thereby forming conducting polymer gels with long-range conductivity. This approach can be used to target specific biological substructures and is suitable for nerve stimulation, paving the way for fully integrated, in vivo-fabricated electronics within the nervous system.

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