
Evaluation of in vitro neuronal networks for the study of spontaneous activity
Author(s) -
Diletta Pozzi
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
stemedicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2705-1188
DOI - 10.37175/stemedicine.v1i2.35
Subject(s) - neuroscience , in vivo , in vitro , premovement neuronal activity , nerve net , nervous system , biology , central nervous system , biological neural network , psychology , genetics
In the absence of external stimuli, the nervous system exhibits a spontaneous electrical activity whose functions are not fully understood, and that represents the background noise of brain operations. Spontaneous activity has been proven to arise not only in vivo, but in in vitro neuronal networks as well, following some stereotypical patterns that reproduce the time course of development of the mammalian nervous system. This review provides an overview of in vitro models for the study of spontaneous network activity, discussing their ability to reproduce in vivo - like dynamics and the main findings obtained with each particular model. While explanted brain slices are able to reproduce the neuronal oscillations typically observed in anaesthetized animals, dissociated cultures allow the use of patient-derived neurons and limit the number of animals used for sample preparation.