A Frequency-Optimized Optogenetic Study of Network-Level Potentiation in Cortical Cultures on Microelectrode Arrays
Matteo Dominici, Ilya Auslender, Clara Zaccaria, Yasaman Heydari, Lorenzo Pavesi

TL;DR
This study develops a systematic framework for inducing and measuring long-term potentiation in neuronal cultures using optogenetics and microelectrode arrays, optimizing stimulation frequency to reliably evoke and analyze network plasticity.
Contribution
It introduces a frequency-optimized optogenetic protocol and analytical methods for quantifying network-level LTP in vitro, advancing tools for studying neural plasticity.
Findings
Low-frequency stimulation preserves stable responses
Higher frequencies cause activity decay
Tetanic stimulation induces long-lasting potentiation
Abstract
Objective. Long-term potentiation (LTP) is a fundamental mechanism underlying learning and memory, yet its investigation at the network level in vitro remains challenging, particularly when optogenetic stimulation is used. The objective of this work is to develop a robust experimental and analytical framework for inducing and quantifying optogenetically driven LTP in neuronal cultures recorded with microelectrode arrays (MEAs). Approach. We first systematically investigate the effect of widefield optogenetic stimulation frequency on evoked neuronal activity, to identify a test-stimulus that reliably probes network responses without inducing activity modulation. By analyzing spike-rate dynamics during repeated stimulation, we characterize frequency-dependent response adaptation consistent with Channelrhodopsin-2 photocycle kinetics. Based on these results, an optimized low-frequency…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotoreceptor and optogenetics research · Neuroscience and Neural Engineering · Photochromic and Fluorescence Chemistry
