Objective
Patch clamp electrophysiology remains the gold standard for
studying ion channels since it was described by Sakmann and Neher in the
1970’s. Although yielding information rich data, conventional patch clamp is
technically demanding and not suitable for high throughput screening efforts. Automated patch clamp devices capable of measuring either single cells, or multiple cells simultaneously have been developed, the highest
throughput so far recording from 768 cells simultaneously and therefore
addressing the needs of high throughput screening laboratories. There is an increasing demand for both higher
throughput and more technically demanding features such as
temperature control, internal solution exchange, current clamp, dynamic clamp
and optogenetics. Here we focus on the Patchliner and SyncroPatch 384/768PE,
two automated patch clamp devices recording from 8 or 384/768 cells
simultaneously, respectively. In the light of the CiPA initiative, features such as temperature control
and current clamp recordings of stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSCs) on automated patch clamp devices have become important. We show
temperature-controlled recordings of hERG and nAChα7R on the Patchliner and/or
SyncroPatch 384/768PE. We also show action potentials of hiPSC-CMs, and
manipulation of action potential duration by introducing virtual IK1 using
dynamic clamp on the Patchliner. Activation of channels using internal perfusion and manipulation using light is also shown.