Publication

An Integrated In Vitro Platform and Biophysical Modeling Approach for Studying Synaptic Transmission in Isolated Neuronal Pairs

June 8, 2025
Computational Modeling
Custom Analysis
MaxOne
MaxOne+ Chip
Microphysiological Systems
PDMS
Neuronal Cell Cultures
Giulia Amos, Vaiva Vasiliauskaitė, Jens Duru, Maria Leonor Azevedo Saramago, Tim Schmid, Alexandre Suter, Ferran Cid Torren, Joël Küchler, Tobias Ruff, János Vörös, Katarina Vulić
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Abstract

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Studying synaptic transmission and plasticity is facilitated in experimental systems that isolate individual neuronal connections. We developed an integrated platform combining polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microstructures with high-density microelectrode arrays to isolate and record single neuronal pairs from human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC)-derived neurons. The system maintained hundreds of parallel neuronal pairs for over 100 days, demonstrating functional synapses through pharmacological validation and long-term potentiation studies. We coupled this platform with a biophysical Hodgkin-Huxley model and simulation-based inference to extract mechanistic parameters from electrophysiological data. The analysis of long-term potentiation stimulation using a biophysical model revealed (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid) AMPA and (N-methyl-D-aspartate) NMDA receptor-specific alterations, providing quantitative insights into synaptic plasticity mechanisms. This integrated approach represents the first system combining isolated synaptic pairs, long-term stability, and mechanistic modeling, offering unprecedented opportunities for studying human synaptic function and plasticity.