Electrically
Conductive Polydopamine–Polypyrrole
as High Performance Biomaterials for Cell Stimulation in Vitro and
Electrical Signal Recording in Vivo
posted on 2018-09-07, 00:00authored bySemin Kim, Lindy K. Jang, Minsu Jang, Sanghun Lee, John George Hardy, Jae Young Lee
Conductive
polymers (CPs) such as polypyrrole (PPY) are emerging
biomaterials for use as scaffolds and bioelectrodes which interact
with biological systems electrically. Still, more electrically conductive
and biologically interactive CPs are required to develop high performance
biomaterials and medical devices. In this study, in situ electrochemical
copolymerization of polydopamine (PDA) and PPY were performed for
electrode modification. Their material and biological properties were
characterized using multiple techniques. The electrical properties
of electrodes coated with PDA/PPY were superior to electrodes coated
with PPY alone. The growth and differentiation of C2C12 myoblasts
and PC12 neuronal cells on PDA/PPY was enhanced compared to PPY. Electrical
stimulation of PC12 cells on PDA/PPY further promoted neuritogenesis.
In vivo electromyography signal measurements demonstrated more sensitive
signals from tibia muscles when using PDA/PPY-coated electrodes than
bare or PPY-coated electrodes, revealing PDA/PPY to be a high-performance
biomaterial with potential for various biomedical applications.