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Automated, high-throughput quantification of EGFP-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope

Normal development of the immune system is essential for overall health and disease resistance. Bony fish, such as the zebrafish (Danio rerio), possess all the major immune cell lineages as mammals and can be employed to model human host response to immune challenge. Zebrafish neutrophils, for examp...

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Autores principales: Efromson, John, Ferrero, Giuliano, Bègue, Aurélien, Doman, Thomas Jedidiah Jenks, Dugo, Clay, Barker, Andi, Saliu, Veton, Reamey, Paul, Kim, Kanghyun, Harfouche, Mark, Yoder, Jeffrey A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10462042/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37645798
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.08.16.553550
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author Efromson, John
Ferrero, Giuliano
Bègue, Aurélien
Doman, Thomas Jedidiah Jenks
Dugo, Clay
Barker, Andi
Saliu, Veton
Reamey, Paul
Kim, Kanghyun
Harfouche, Mark
Yoder, Jeffrey A.
author_facet Efromson, John
Ferrero, Giuliano
Bègue, Aurélien
Doman, Thomas Jedidiah Jenks
Dugo, Clay
Barker, Andi
Saliu, Veton
Reamey, Paul
Kim, Kanghyun
Harfouche, Mark
Yoder, Jeffrey A.
author_sort Efromson, John
collection PubMed
description Normal development of the immune system is essential for overall health and disease resistance. Bony fish, such as the zebrafish (Danio rerio), possess all the major immune cell lineages as mammals and can be employed to model human host response to immune challenge. Zebrafish neutrophils, for example, are present in the transparent larvae as early as 48 hours post fertilization and have been examined in numerous infection and immunotoxicology reports. One significant advantage of the zebrafish model is the ability to affordably generate high numbers of individual larvae that can be arrayed in multi-well plates for high throughput genetic and chemical exposure screens. However, traditional workflows for imaging individual larvae have been limited to low-throughput studies using traditional microscopes and manual analyses. Using a newly developed, parallelized microscope, the Multi-Camera Array Microscope (MCAM(™)), we have optimized a rapid, high-resolution algorithmic method to count fluorescently labeled cells in zebrafish larvae in vivo. Using transgenic zebrafish larvae, in which neutrophils express EGFP, we captured 18 gigapixels of images across a full 96-well plate, in 75 seconds, and processed the resulting datastream, counting individual fluorescent neutrophils in all individual larvae in 5 minutes. This automation is facilitated by a machine learning segmentation algorithm that defines the most in-focus view of each larva in each well after which pixel intensity thresholding and blob detection are employed to locate and count fluorescent cells. We validated this method by comparing algorithmic neutrophil counts to manual counts in larvae subjected to changes in neutrophil numbers, demonstrating the utility of this approach for high-throughput genetic and chemical screens where a change in neutrophil number is an endpoint metric. Using the MCAM(™) we have been able to, within minutes, acquire both enough data to create an automated algorithm and execute a biological experiment with statistical significance. Finally, we present this open-source software package which allows the user to train and evaluate a custom machine learning segmentation model and use it to localize zebrafish and analyze cell counts within the segmented region of interest. This software can be modified as needed for studies involving other zebrafish cell lineages using different transgenic reporter lines and can also be adapted for studies using other amenable model species.
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spelling pubmed-104620422023-08-29 Automated, high-throughput quantification of EGFP-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope Efromson, John Ferrero, Giuliano Bègue, Aurélien Doman, Thomas Jedidiah Jenks Dugo, Clay Barker, Andi Saliu, Veton Reamey, Paul Kim, Kanghyun Harfouche, Mark Yoder, Jeffrey A. bioRxiv Article Normal development of the immune system is essential for overall health and disease resistance. Bony fish, such as the zebrafish (Danio rerio), possess all the major immune cell lineages as mammals and can be employed to model human host response to immune challenge. Zebrafish neutrophils, for example, are present in the transparent larvae as early as 48 hours post fertilization and have been examined in numerous infection and immunotoxicology reports. One significant advantage of the zebrafish model is the ability to affordably generate high numbers of individual larvae that can be arrayed in multi-well plates for high throughput genetic and chemical exposure screens. However, traditional workflows for imaging individual larvae have been limited to low-throughput studies using traditional microscopes and manual analyses. Using a newly developed, parallelized microscope, the Multi-Camera Array Microscope (MCAM(™)), we have optimized a rapid, high-resolution algorithmic method to count fluorescently labeled cells in zebrafish larvae in vivo. Using transgenic zebrafish larvae, in which neutrophils express EGFP, we captured 18 gigapixels of images across a full 96-well plate, in 75 seconds, and processed the resulting datastream, counting individual fluorescent neutrophils in all individual larvae in 5 minutes. This automation is facilitated by a machine learning segmentation algorithm that defines the most in-focus view of each larva in each well after which pixel intensity thresholding and blob detection are employed to locate and count fluorescent cells. We validated this method by comparing algorithmic neutrophil counts to manual counts in larvae subjected to changes in neutrophil numbers, demonstrating the utility of this approach for high-throughput genetic and chemical screens where a change in neutrophil number is an endpoint metric. Using the MCAM(™) we have been able to, within minutes, acquire both enough data to create an automated algorithm and execute a biological experiment with statistical significance. Finally, we present this open-source software package which allows the user to train and evaluate a custom machine learning segmentation model and use it to localize zebrafish and analyze cell counts within the segmented region of interest. This software can be modified as needed for studies involving other zebrafish cell lineages using different transgenic reporter lines and can also be adapted for studies using other amenable model species. Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory 2023-08-18 /pmc/articles/PMC10462042/ /pubmed/37645798 http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.08.16.553550 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, so long as attribution is given to the creator. The license allows for commercial use.
spellingShingle Article
Efromson, John
Ferrero, Giuliano
Bègue, Aurélien
Doman, Thomas Jedidiah Jenks
Dugo, Clay
Barker, Andi
Saliu, Veton
Reamey, Paul
Kim, Kanghyun
Harfouche, Mark
Yoder, Jeffrey A.
Automated, high-throughput quantification of EGFP-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope
title Automated, high-throughput quantification of EGFP-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope
title_full Automated, high-throughput quantification of EGFP-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope
title_fullStr Automated, high-throughput quantification of EGFP-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope
title_full_unstemmed Automated, high-throughput quantification of EGFP-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope
title_short Automated, high-throughput quantification of EGFP-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope
title_sort automated, high-throughput quantification of egfp-expressing neutrophils in zebrafish by machine learning and a highly-parallelized microscope
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10462042/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37645798
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2023.08.16.553550
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