Abstract
The mechanism underlying visual restoration in blind animal models of retinitis pigmentosa using a liquid retina prosthesis based on semiconductive polymeric nanoparticles is still being debated. Through the application of mathematical models and specific experiments, we developed a coherent understanding of abiotic/biotic coupling, capturing the essential mechanism of photostimulation responsible for nanoparticle-induced retina activation. Our modeling is based on the solution of drift-diffusion and Poisson-Nernst-Planck models in the multi-physics neuron-cleft-nanoparticle-extracellular space domain, accounting for the electro-chemical motion of all the relevant species following photoexcitation. Modeling was coupled with electron microscopy to estimate the size of the neuron-nanoparticle cleft and electrophysiology on retina explants acutely or chronically injected with nanoparticles. Overall, we present a consistent picture of electrostatic depolarization of the bipolar cell driven by the pseudo-capacitive charging of the nanoparticle. We demonstrate that the highly resistive cleft composition, due to filling by adhesion/extracellular matrix proteins, is a crucial ingredient for establishing functional electrostatic coupling. Additionally, we show that the photo-chemical generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) becomes relevant only at very high light intensities, far exceeding the physiological ones, in agreement with the lack of phototoxicity shown in vivo.
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