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Stimulation of neurite outgrowth using an electrically conducting polymer

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TLDR
The electrically conductive polymer--oxidized polypyrrole (PP)--has been evaluated for use as a substrate to enhance nerve cell interactions in culture as a first step toward potentially using such polymers to stimulate in vivo nerve regeneration.
Abstract
Damage to peripheral nerves often cannot be repaired by the juxtaposition of the severed nerve ends. Surgeons have typically used autologous nerve grafts, which have several drawbacks including the need for multiple surgical procedures and loss of function at the donor site. As an alternative, the use of nerve guidance channels to bridge the gap between severed nerve ends is being explored. In this paper, the electrically conductive polymer—oxidized polypyrrole (PP)—has been evaluated for use as a substrate to enhance nerve cell interactions in culture as a first step toward potentially using such polymers to stimulate in vivo nerve regeneration. Image analysis demonstrates that PC-12 cells and primary chicken sciatic nerve explants attached and extended neurites equally well on both PP films and tissue culture polystyrene in the absence of electrical stimulation. In contrast, PC-12 cells interacted poorly with indium tin oxide (ITO), poly(l-lactic acid) (PLA), and poly(lactic acid-co-glycolic acid) surfaces. However, PC-12 cells cultured on PP films and subjected to an electrical stimulus through the film showed a significant increase in neurite lengths compared with ones that were not subjected to electrical stimulation through the film and tissue culture polystyrene controls. The median neurite length for PC-12 cells grown on PP and subjected to an electrical stimulus was 18.14 μm (n = 5643) compared with 9.5 μm (n = 4440) for controls. Furthermore, animal implantation studies reveal that PP invokes little adverse tissue response compared with poly(lactic acid-co-glycolic acid).

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Response of brain tissue to chronically implanted neural electrodes.

TL;DR: This review presents the biological components and time course of the acute and chronic tissue reaction in brain tissue, analyses the brain tissue response of current electrode systems, and comments on the various material science and bioactive strategies undertaken by electrode designers to enhance electrode performance.
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Conducting polymers in biomedical engineering

TL;DR: Although there remain many unanswered questions, particularly regarding the mechanisms by which electrical conduction through CPs affects cells, there is already compelling evidence to demonstrate the significant impact that CPs are starting to make in the biomedical field.
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Neural tissue engineering: strategies for repair and regeneration.

TL;DR: The nervous system physiology, the factors that are critical for nerve repair, and the current approaches that are being explored to aid peripheral nerve regeneration and spinal cord repair are reviewed.
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The rise of plastic bioelectronics

TL;DR: Plastic bioelectronics is a research field that takes advantage of the inherent properties of polymers and soft organic electronics for applications at the interface of biology and electronics, which are soft, stretchable and mechanically conformable.
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Biodegradable synthetic polymers: Preparation, functionalization and biomedical application

TL;DR: This review presents a comprehensive introduction to various types of synthetic biodegradable polymers with reactive groups and bioactive groups, and further describes their structure, preparation procedures and properties.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Establishment of a noradrenergic clonal line of rat adrenal pheochromocytoma cells which respond to nerve growth factor.

TL;DR: A single cell clonal line which responds reversibly to nerve growth factor (NGF) has been established from a transplantable rat adrenal pheochromocytoma and should be a useful model system for neurobiological and neurochemical studies.
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Electrochemistry of conducting polypyrrole films

TL;DR: In this paper, the same authors showed that polypyrrole, poly-N-methylpyrron and poly-phenyl pyrrole polymers can be electrochemically driven between the oxidized (conducting) form and the neutral (insulating) form.
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Orientation of neurite growth by extracellular electric fields

TL;DR: This finding is consistent with the notion that cathodal accumulation of growth-controlling surface glycoproteins by the field is the underlying mechanism of the field-induced orientation of neurite growth toward the cathode.
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Electrically conducting polymers can noninvasively control the shape and growth of mammalian cells.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors synthesized optically transparent polypyrrole thin films and studied them in environments suitable for protein adsorption and mammalian cell culture, and demonstrated that extracellular matrix molecules, such as fibronectin, adsorb efficiently onto poly pyrrole and support cell attachment under serum free conditions.

Electrically conducting polymers cannoninvasively control the shapeandgrowth ofmammalian cells

TL;DR: The data suggest that electrically conducting polymers may represent a type of culture substrate which could provide a noninvasive means to control the shape and function of adherent cells, independent of any medium alteration.
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