The Hybrid Drive: a chronic implant device combining tetrode arrays with silicon probes for layer-resolved ensemble electrophysiology in freely moving mice

J Neural Eng. 2022 Jun 6;19(3). doi: 10.1088/1741-2552/ac6771.

Abstract

Objective. Understanding the function of brain cortices requires simultaneous investigation at multiple spatial and temporal scales and to link neural activity to an animal's behavior. A major challenge is to measure within- and across-layer information in actively behaving animals, in particular in mice that have become a major species in neuroscience due to an extensive genetic toolkit. Here we describe the Hybrid Drive, a new chronic implant for mice that combines tetrode arrays to record within-layer information with silicon probes to simultaneously measure across-layer information.Approach. The design of our device combines up to 14 tetrodes and 2 silicon probes, that can be arranged in custom arrays to generate unique areas-specific (and multi-area) layouts.Main results. We show that large numbers of neurons and layer-resolved local field potentials can be recorded from the same brain region across weeks without loss in electrophysiological signal quality. The drive's lightweight structure (≈3.5 g) leaves animal behavior largely unchanged, compared to other tetrode drives, during a variety of experimental paradigms. We demonstrate how the data collected with the Hybrid Drive allow state-of-the-art analysis in a series of experiments linking the spiking activity of CA1 pyramidal layer neurons to the oscillatory activity across hippocampal layers.Significance. Our new device fits a gap in the existing technology and increases the range and precision of questions that can be addressed about neural computations in freely behaving mice.

Keywords: electrophysiology; freely moving; local field potential; micro-drive; neural populations; open-source.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Behavior, Animal / physiology
  • Electrophysiological Phenomena*
  • Electrophysiology / methods
  • Mice
  • Neurons / physiology
  • Silicon*

Substances

  • Silicon