Publication

MyeliMAP: a microfluidic-multielectrode array hybrid platform to investigate oligodendrocyte function in human iPSC derived brain-like networks

January 1, 2026
API
Advanced Electrical Stimulation
Burst Detection
Custom Analysis
MEA Metrics
MaxOne
MaxOne+ Chip
Microphysiological Systems
Network Patterning
PDMS
Spike Sorting
Neuronal Cell Cultures
Karan Ahuja, Blandine F. Clément, Giulia Amos, Joël Küchler, Keimpe Wierda, Yoke Chin Chai, Lieve Moons, Catherine Verfaillie
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Abstract

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MyeliMAP, a human iPSC-based myelination platform integrating microfluidics and high-density electrophysiology enables functional assessment of axonal conduction and myelin-dependent signal propagation. , Oligodendrocytes are the myelinating glia of the central nervous system (CNS), essential for rapid signal propagation, metabolic support, and neuronal health. While rodent-based cultures and organoid systems have provided insights into oligodendrocyte biology, they fall short of capturing human-specific features of myelination or integrating structural and functional readouts. Here, we present MyeliMAP (Myelination MAPping), a human pluripotent stem cell (hPSC) -derived microphysiological and electrophysiological platform that enables robust modeling of CNS myelination. The system combines inducible hPSC-derived neurons and oligodendrocytes in a custom-engineered microfluidic microstructure designed to mimic the developing brain microenvironment, promoting spatially organized axon–glia interactions and controlled myelin sheath formation. Within six weeks, we demonstrate myelin formation and maturation by immunofluorescence and ultrastructural validation using transmission electron microscopy (TEM), confirming compact multilayered wrapping of human axons. Importantly, the microstructure is directly integrated with a high-density microelectrode array (HD-MEA), enabling real-time, long-term functional assessment of neuronal network activity and myelin-dependent changes in signal conduction. This allowed us to demonstrate that oligodendrocyte-based myelinated neurons display enhanced conduction velocity of action potentials compared to neuron monocultures. Moreover, the presence of oligodendrocytes stabilized the temporal neuronal network activity by reducing variability in firing patterns and enhancing synchrony across the culture. This dual structure–function approach surpasses static end-point analyses by coupling morphological validation with dynamic, quantitative measurements of maturing circuit physiology. MyeliMAP provides a reproducible, human-relevant platform to dissect neuron–glia interactions and accelerate discovery of remyelination-promoting strategies for CNS disease.