An in situ self-adaptive hydrogel coating enables seamless neural interfaces via okra mucilage polysaccharide and α-helical peptide amphiphiles co-assembly
Abstract
Long-term stability of neural interfaces is frequently compromised by mechanical mismatch and chronic neuroinflammation, often leading to electrode detachment and signal failure. While hydrogel coatings offer a solution, conventional designs typically rely on exogenous conductive fillers that can sacrifice mechanical flexibility or induce toxicity. Here, we report on a soft neural interface based on the supramolecular co-assembly of a renewable natural polysaccharide, okra mucilage polysaccharide (OMP), and an α-helical peptide amphiphiles (APA). The resulting OMP-APA hydrogel (OP gel) exhibits environment-responsive enhancements in bioadhesion and charge-transport capability triggered by physiological pH and electrical stimulation. These properties arise from intrinsic, stimulus-responsive alterations in fibre architecture and orientation, eliminating the need for conductive fillers. Leveraging interfacial liquid-liquid phase separation, we demonstrate the in situ coating of ultra-thin OP-gel coating onto carbon fibre electrodes (CFE). The OP-gel-coated electrodes (OP-CFE) significantly mitigate foreign body responses and glial scarring, enabling stable, high-quality neural recordings in a mouse cortical in vivo model. Our findings provide a versatile strategy for constructing seamless, multifunctional bio-interfaces through supramolecular co-assembly, with broad implications for advancing neural prosthetics and neuroscience research.
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