Medical Bionics - Research Publications

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    Spread of activation and interaction between channels with multi-channel optogenetic stimulation in the mouse cochlea
    Azees, AA ; Thompson, AC ; Thomas, R ; Zhou, J ; Ruther, P ; Wise, AK ; Ajay, EA ; Garrett, DJ ; Quigley, A ; Fallon, JB ; Richardson, RT (ELSEVIER, 2023-12)
    For individuals with severe to profound hearing loss resulting from irreversibly damaged hair cells, cochlear implants can be used to restore hearing by delivering electrical stimulation directly to the spiral ganglion neurons. However, current spread lowers the spatial resolution of neural activation. Since light can be easily confined, optogenetics is a technique that has the potential to improve the precision of neural activation, whereby visible light is used to stimulate neurons that are modified with light-sensitive opsins. This study compares the spread of neural activity across the inferior colliculus of the auditory midbrain during electrical and optical stimulation in the cochlea of acutely deafened mice with opsin-modified spiral ganglion neurons (H134R variant of the channelrhodopsin-2). Monopolar electrical stimulation was delivered via each of four 0.2 mm wide platinum electrode rings at 0.6 mm centre-to-centre spacing, whereas 453 nm wavelength light was delivered via each of five 0.22 × 0.27 mm micro-light emitting diodes (LEDs) at 0.52 mm centre-to-centre spacing. Channel interactions were also quantified by threshold changes during simultaneous stimulation by pairs of electrodes or micro-LEDs at different distances between the electrodes (0.6, 1.2 and 1.8 mm) or micro-LEDs (0.52, 1.04, 1.56 and 2.08 mm). The spread of activation resulting from single channel optical stimulation was approximately half that of monopolar electrical stimulation as measured at two levels of discrimination above threshold (p<0.001), whereas there was no significant difference between optical stimulation in opsin-modified deafened mice and pure tone acoustic stimulation in normal-hearing mice. During simultaneous micro-LED stimulation, there were minimal channel interactions for all micro-LED spacings tested. For neighbouring micro-LEDs/electrodes, the relative influence on threshold was 13-fold less for optical stimulation compared electrical stimulation (p<0.05). The outcomes of this study show that the higher spatial precision of optogenetic stimulation results in reduced channel interaction compared to electrical stimulation, which could increase the number of independent channels in a cochlear implant. Increased spatial resolution and the ability to activate more than one channel simultaneously could lead to better speech perception in cochlear implant recipients.
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    Developing the supraparticle technology for round window-mediated drug administration into the cochlea
    Gunewardene, N ; Ma, Y ; Lam, P ; Wagstaff, S ; Cortez-Jugo, C ; Hu, Y ; Caruso, F ; Richardsona, RT ; Wise, AK (ELSEVIER, 2023-09)
    The semi-permeable round window membrane (RWM) is the gateway to the cochlea. Although the RWM is considered a minimally invasive and clinically accepted route for localised drug delivery to the cochlea, overcoming this barrier is challenging, hindering development of effective therapies for hearing loss. Neurotrophin 3 (NT3) is an emerging treatment option for hearing loss, but its therapeutic effect relies on sustained delivery across the RWM into the cochlea. Silica supraparticles (SPs) are drug delivery carriers capable of providing long-term NT3 delivery, when injected directly into the guinea pig cochlea. However, for clinical translation, a RWM delivery approach is desirable. Here, we aimed to test approaches to improve the longevity and biodistribution of NT3 inside the cochlea after RWM implantation of SPs in guinea pigs and cats. Three approaches were tested (i) coating the SPs to slow drug release (ii) improving the retention of SPs on the RWM using a clinically approved gel formulation and (iii) permeabilising the RWM with hyaluronic acid. A radioactive tracer (iodine 125: 125I) tagged to NT3 (125I NT3) was loaded into the SPs to characterise drug pharmacokinetics in vitro and in vivo. The neurotrophin-loaded SPs were coated using a chitosan and alginate layer-by-layer coating strategy, named as '(Chi/Alg)SPs', to promote long term drug release. The guinea pigs were implanted with 5× 125I NT3 loaded (Chi/Alg) SPs on the RWM, while cats were implanted with 30× (Chi/Alg) SPs. A cohort of animals were also implanted with SPs (controls). We found that the NT3 loaded (Chi/Alg)SPs exhibited a more linear release profile compared to NT3 loaded SPs alone. The 125I NT3 loaded (Chi/Alg)SPs in fibrin sealant had efficient drug loading (~5 μg of NT3 loaded per SP that weights ~50 μg) and elution capacities (~49% over one month) in vitro. Compared to the SPs in fibrin sealant, the (Chi/Alg)SPs in fibrin sealant had a significantly slower 125I NT3 drug release profile over the first 7 days in vitro (~12% for (Chi/Alg) SPs in fibrin sealant vs ~43% for SPs in fibrin sealant). One-month post-implantation of (Chi/Alg) SPs, gamma count measurements revealed an average of 0.3 μg NT3 remained in the guinea pig cochlea, while for the cat, 1.3 μg remained. Histological analysis of cochlear tissue revealed presence of a 125I NT3 signal localised in the basilar membrane of the lower basal turn in some cochleae after 4 weeks in guinea pigs and 8 weeks in cats. Comparatively, and in contrast to the in vitro release data, implantation of the SPs presented better NT3 retention and distribution inside the cochlea in both the guinea pigs and cats. No significant difference in drug entry was observed upon acute treatment of the RWM with hyaluronic acid. Collectively, our findings indicate that SPs and (Chi/Alg)SPs can facilitate drug transfer across the RWM, with detectable levels inside the cat cochlea even after 8 weeks with the intracochlear approach. This is the first study to examine neurotrophin pharmacokinetics in the cochlea for such an extended period of times in these two animal species. Whilst promising, we note that outcomes between animals were variable, and opposing results were found between in vitro and in vivo release studies. These findings have important clinical ramifications, emphasising the need to understand the physical properties and mechanics of this complex barrier in parallel with the development of therapies for hearing loss.
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    Hybrid optogenetic and electrical stimulation for greater spatial resolution and temporal fidelity of cochlear activation
    Thompson, AC ; Wise, AK ; Hart, WL ; Needham, K ; Fallon, JB ; Gunewardene, N ; Stoddart, PR ; Richardson, RT (IOP PUBLISHING LTD, 2020-10)
    OBJECTIVE: Compared to electrical stimulation, optogenetic stimulation has the potential to improve the spatial precision of neural activation in neuroprostheses, but it requires intense light and has relatively poor temporal kinetics. We tested the effect of hybrid stimulation, which is the combination of subthreshold optical and electrical stimuli, on spectral and temporal fidelity in the cochlea by recording multiunit activity in the inferior colliculus of channelrhodopsin (H134R variant) transgenic mice. APPROACH: Pulsed light or biphasic electrical pulses were delivered to cochlear spiral ganglion neurons of acutely deafened mice, either as individual stimuli or as hybrid stimuli for which the timing of the electrical pulse had a varied delay relative to the start of the optical pulse. Response thresholds, spread of activation and entrainment data were obtained from multi-unit recordings from the auditory midbrain. MAIN RESULTS: Facilitation occurred when subthreshold electrical stimuli were applied at the end of, or up to 3.75 ms after subthreshold optical pulses. The spread of activation resulting from hybrid stimulation was significantly narrower than electrical-only and optical-only stimulation (p < 0.01), measured at equivalent suprathreshold levels of loudness that are relevant to cochlear implant users. Furthermore, temporal fidelity, measured as maximum following rates to 300 ms pulse trains bursts up to 240 Hz, was 2.4-fold greater than optical-only stimulation (p < 0.05). SIGNIFICANCE: By significantly improving spectral resolution of electrical- and optical-only stimulation and the temporal fidelity of optical-only stimulation, hybrid stimulation has the potential to increase the number of perceptually independent stimulating channels in a cochlear implant.
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    Auditory nerve responses to combined optogenetic and electrical stimulation in chronically deaf mice
    Ajay, EA ; Trang, EP ; Thompson, AC ; Wise, AK ; Grayden, DB ; Fallon, JB ; Richardson, RT (IOP Publishing Ltd, 2023-04-01)
    Objective. Optogenetic stimulation of the auditory nerve offers the ability to overcome the limitations of cochlear implants through spatially precise stimulation, but cannot achieve the temporal precision nor temporal fidelity required for good hearing outcomes. Auditory midbrain recordings have indicated a combined (hybrid) stimulation approach may permit improvements in the temporal precision without sacrificing spatial precision by facilitating electrical activation thresholds. However, previous research has been conducted in undeafened or acutely deafened animal models, and the impact of chronic deafness remains unclear. Our study aims to compare the temporal precision of auditory nerve responses to optogenetic, electrical, and combined stimulation in acutely and chronically deafened animals.Methods. We directly compare the temporal fidelity (measured as percentage of elicited responses) and precision (i.e. stability of response size and timing) of electrical, optogenetic, and hybrid stimulation (varying sub-threshold or supra-threshold optogenetic power levels combined with electrical stimuli) through compound action potential and single-unit recordings of the auditory nerve in transgenic mice expressing the opsin ChR2-H134R in auditory neurons. Recordings were conducted immediately or 2-3 weeks following aminoglycoside deafening when there was evidence of auditory nerve degeneration.Main results. Results showed that responses to electrical stimulation had significantly greater temporal precision than optogenetic stimulation (p< 0.001 for measures of response size and timing). This temporal precision could be maintained with hybrid stimulation, but only when the optogenetic stimulation power used was below or near activation threshold and worsened with increasing optical power. Chronically deafened mice showed poorer facilitation of electrical activation thresholds with concurrent optogenetic stimulation than acutely deafened mice. Additionally, responses in chronically deafened mice showed poorer temporal fidelity, but improved temporal precision to optogenetic and hybrid stimulation compared to acutely deafened mice.Significance. These findings show that the improvement to temporal fidelity and temporal precision provided by a hybrid stimulation paradigm can also be achieved in chronically deafened animals, albeit at higher levels of concurrent optogenetic stimulation levels.
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    Pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of supraparticle-delivered neurotrophin 3 in the guinea pig cochlea
    Gunewardene, N ; Lam, P ; Ma, Y ; Caruso, F ; Wagstaff, S ; Richardson, RT ; Wise, AK (ELSEVIER, 2022-02)
    Hearing loss is the most prevalent sensory disorder affecting nearly half a billion people worldwide. Aside from devices to assist hearing, such as hearing aids and cochlear implants, a drug treatment for hearing loss has yet to be developed. The neurotrophin family of growth factors has long been established as a potential therapy, however delivery of these factors into the inner ear at therapeutic levels over a sustained period of time has remained a challenge restricting clinical translation. We previously demonstrated that direct delivery of exogenous neurotrophin-3 (NT3) in the guinea pig cochleae via a bolus injection was rapidly cleared from the inner ear, with almost complete elimination 3 days post-treatment. Here, we explored the potential of suprapaticles (SPs) for NT3 delivery to the inner ear to achieve sustained delivery over time. SPs are porous spheroid structures comprised of smaller colloidal silica nanoparticles that provide a platform for long-term controlled release of therapeutics. This study aimed to assess the pharmacokinetics and biodistribution of SP-delivered NT3. We used a radioactive tracer (iodine 125: 125I) to label the NT3 to determine the loading, retention and distribution of NT3 delivered via SPs. Gamma measurements taken from 125I NT3 loaded SPs revealed high drug loading (an average of 5.3 μg of NT3 loaded per SP weighing 50 μg) and elution capacities in vitro (67% cumulative release over one month). Whole cochlear gamma measurements from SP-implanted cochleae harvested at various time points revealed detection of 125I NT3 in the guinea pig cochlea after one month, with 3.6 and 10% of the loaded drug remaining in the intracochlear and round window-implanted cochleae respectively. Autoradiography analysis of cochlear micro-sections revealed widespread 125I NT3 distribution after intracochlear SP delivery, but more restricted distribution with the round window delivery approach. Collectively, drug delivery into the inner ear using SPs support sustained, long-term availability and release of neurotrophins in the inner ear.
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    Viral-mediated transduction of auditory neurons with opsins for optical and hybrid activation
    Richardson, RT ; Thompson, AC ; Wise, AK ; Ajay, EA ; Gunewardene, N ; O'Leary, SJ ; Stoddart, PR ; Fallon, JB (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2021-05-27)
    Optical stimulation is a paradigm-shifting approach to modulating neural activity that has the potential to overcome the issue of current spread that occurs with electrical stimulation by providing focused stimuli. But optical stimulation either requires high power infrared light or genetic modification of neurons to make them responsive to lower power visible light. This work examines optical activation of auditory neurons following optogenetic modification via AAV injection in two species (mouse and guinea pig). An Anc80 viral vector was used to express the channelrhodopsin variant ChR2-H134R fused to a fluorescent reporter gene under the control of the human synapsin-1 promoter. The AAV was administered directly to the cochlea (n = 33) or posterior semi-circular canal of C57BL/6 mice (n = 4) or to guinea pig cochleae (n = 6). Light (488 nm), electrical stimuli or the combination of these (hybrid stimulation) was delivered to the cochlea via a laser-coupled optical fibre and co-located platinum wire. Activation thresholds, spread of activation and stimulus interactions were obtained from multi-unit recordings from the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus of injected mice, as well as ChR2-H134R transgenic mice (n = 4). Expression of ChR2-H134R was examined by histology. In the mouse, transduction of auditory neurons by the Anc80 viral vector was most successful when injected at a neonatal age with up to 89% of neurons transduced. Auditory neuron transductions were not successful in guinea pigs. Inferior colliculus responses to optical stimuli were detected in a cochleotopic manner in all mice with ChR2-H134R expression. There was a significant correlation between lower activation thresholds in mice and higher proportions of transduced neurons. There was no difference in spread of activation between optical stimulation and electrical stimulation provided by the light/electrical delivery system used here (optical fibre with bonded 25 µm platinum/iridium wire). Hybrid stimulation, comprised of sub-threshold optical stimulation to 'prime' or raise the excitability of the neurons, lowered the threshold for electrical activation in most cases, but the impact on excitation width was more variable compared to transgenic mice. This study demonstrates the impact of opsin expression levels and expression pattern on optical and hybrid stimulation when considering optical or hybrid stimulation techniques for neuromodulation.
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    Neurotrophin Gene Therapy for Sustained Neural Preservation after Deafness
    Atkinson, PJ ; Wise, AK ; Flynn, BO ; Nayagam, BA ; Hume, CR ; O'Leary, SJ ; Shepherd, RK ; Richardson, RT ; Kirchmair, R (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2012-12-17)
    The cochlear implant provides auditory cues to profoundly deaf patients by electrically stimulating the residual spiral ganglion neurons. These neurons, however, undergo progressive degeneration after hearing loss, marked initially by peripheral fibre retraction and ultimately culminating in cell death. This research aims to use gene therapy techniques to both hold and reverse this degeneration by providing a sustained and localised source of neurotrophins to the deafened cochlea. Adenoviral vectors containing green fluorescent protein, with or without neurotrophin-3 and brain derived neurotrophic factor, were injected into the lower basal turn of scala media of guinea pigs ototoxically deafened one week prior to intervention. This single injection resulted in localised and sustained gene expression, principally in the supporting cells within the organ of Corti. Guinea pigs treated with adenoviral neurotrophin-gene therapy had greater neuronal survival compared to contralateral non-treated cochleae when examined at 7 and 11 weeks post injection. Moreover; there was evidence of directed peripheral fibre regrowth towards cells expressing neurotrophin genes after both treatment periods. These data suggest that neurotrophin-gene therapy can provide sustained protection of spiral ganglion neurons and peripheral fibres after hearing loss.
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    Hair Cell Regeneration after ATOH1 Gene Therapy in the Cochlea of Profoundly Deaf Adult Guinea Pigs
    Atkinson, PJ ; Wise, AK ; Flynn, BO ; Nayagam, BA ; Richardson, RT ; Riley, B (PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE, 2014-07-18)
    The degeneration of hair cells in the mammalian cochlea results in permanent sensorineural hearing loss. This study aimed to promote the regeneration of sensory hair cells in the mature cochlea and their reconnection with auditory neurons through the introduction of ATOH1, a transcription factor known to be necessary for hair cell development, and the introduction of neurotrophic factors. Adenoviral vectors containing ATOH1 alone, or with neurotrophin-3 and brain derived neurotrophic factor were injected into the lower basal scala media of guinea pig cochleae four days post ototoxic deafening. Guinea pigs treated with ATOH1 gene therapy, alone, had a significantly greater number of cells expressing hair cell markers compared to the contralateral non-treated cochlea when examined 3 weeks post-treatment. This increase, however, did not result in a commensurate improvement in hearing thresholds, nor was there an increase in synaptic ribbons, as measured by CtBP2 puncta after ATOH1 treatment alone, or when combined with neurotrophins. However, hair cell formation and synaptogenesis after co-treatment with ATOH1 and neurotrophic factors remain inconclusive as viral transduction was reduced due to the halving of viral titres when the samples were combined. Collectively, these data suggest that, whilst ATOH1 alone can drive non-sensory cells towards an immature sensory hair cell phenotype in the mature cochlea, this does not result in functional improvements after aminoglycoside-induced deafness.
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    Optical stimulation of neural tissue
    Richardson, RT ; Ibbotson, MR ; Thompson, AC ; Wise, AK ; Fallon, JB (INST ENGINEERING TECHNOLOGY-IET, 2020-06)
    Electrical stimulation has been used for decades in devices such as pacemakers, cochlear implants and more recently for deep brain and retinal stimulation and electroceutical treatment of disease. However, current spread from the electrodes limits the precision of neural activation, leading to a low quality therapeutic outcome or undesired side-effects. Alternative methods of neural stimulation such as optical stimulation offer the potential to deliver higher spatial resolution of neural activation. Direct optical stimulation is possible with infrared light, while visible light can be used to activate neurons if the neural tissue is genetically modified with a light sensitive ion channel. Experimentally, both methods have resulted in highly precise stimulation with little spread of activation at least in the cochlea, each with advantages and disadvantages. Infrared neural stimulation does not require modification of the neural tissue, but has very high power requirements. Optogenetics can achieve precision of activation with lower power, but only in conjunction with targeted insertion of a light sensitive ion channel into the nervous system via gene therapy. This review will examine the advantages and limitations of optical stimulation of neural tissue, using the cochlea as an exemplary model and recent developments for retinal and deep brain stimulation.
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    Gel-Mediated Electrospray Assembly of Silica Supraparticles for Sustained Drug Delivery
    Ma, Y ; Bjoernmalm, M ; Wise, AK ; Cortez-Jugo, C ; Revalor, E ; Ju, Y ; Feeney, OM ; Richardson, RT ; Hanssen, E ; Shepherd, RK ; Porter, CJH ; Caruso, F (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2018-09-19)
    Supraparticles (SPs) composed of smaller colloidal particles provide a platform for the long-term, controlled release of therapeutics in biomedical applications. However, current synthesis methods used to achieve high drug loading and those involving biocompatible materials are often tedious and low throughput, thereby limiting the translation of SPs to diverse applications. Herein, we present a simple, effective, and automatable alginate-mediated electrospray technique for the assembly of robust spherical silica SPs (Si-SPs) for long-term (>4 months) drug delivery. The Si-SPs are composed of either porous or nonporous primary Si particles within a decomposable alginate matrix. The size and shape of the Si-SPs can be tailored by controlling the concentrations of alginate and silica primary particles used and key electrospraying parameters, such as flow rate, voltage, and collector distance. Furthermore, the performance (including drug loading kinetics, loading capacity, loading efficiency, and drug release) of the Si-SPs can be tuned by changing the porosity of the primary particles and through the retention or removal (via calcination) of the alginate matrix. The structure and morphology of the Si-SPs were characterized by electron microscopy, dynamic light scattering, N2 adsorption-desorption analysis, and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy. The cytotoxicity and degradability of the Si-SPs were also examined. Drug loading kinetics and loading capacity for six different types of Si-SPs, using a model protein drug (fluorescently labeled lysozyme), demonstrate that Si-SPs prepared from primary silica particles with large pores can load significant amounts of lysozyme (∼10 μg per SP) and exhibit sustained, long-term release of more than 150 days. Our experiments show that Si-SPs can be produced through a gel-mediated electrospray technique that is robust and automatable (important for clinical translation and commercialization) and that they present a promising platform for long-term drug delivery.