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Multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing

BACKGROUND: Dysfunction in the endolysosome, a late endosomal to lysosomal degradative intracellular compartment, is an early hallmark of some neurodegenerative diseases, in particular Alzheimer's disease. However, the subtle morphological changes in compartments of affected neurons are difficu...

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Autores principales: Kumarasamy, Saravana K, Wang, Yunshi, Viswanathan, Vignesh, Kraut, Rachel S
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2639580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19014586
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0381-1-10
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author Kumarasamy, Saravana K
Wang, Yunshi
Viswanathan, Vignesh
Kraut, Rachel S
author_facet Kumarasamy, Saravana K
Wang, Yunshi
Viswanathan, Vignesh
Kraut, Rachel S
author_sort Kumarasamy, Saravana K
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dysfunction in the endolysosome, a late endosomal to lysosomal degradative intracellular compartment, is an early hallmark of some neurodegenerative diseases, in particular Alzheimer's disease. However, the subtle morphological changes in compartments of affected neurons are difficult to quantify quickly and reliably, making this phenotype inaccessible as either an early diagnostic marker, or as a read-out for drug screening. METHODS: We present a method for automatic detection of fluorescently labeled endolysosomes in degenerative neurons in situ. The Drosophila blue cheese (bchs) mutant was taken as a genetic neurodegenerative model for direct in situ visualization and quantification of endolysosomal compartments in affected neurons. Endolysosomal compartments were first detected automatically from 2-D image sections using a combination of point-wise multi-scale correlation and normalized correlation operations. This detection algorithm performed well at recognizing fluorescent endolysosomes, unlike conventional convolution methods, which are confounded by variable intensity levels and background noise. Morphological feature differences between endolysosomes from wild type vs. degenerative neurons were then quantified by multivariate profiling and support vector machine (SVM) classification based on compartment density, size and contrast distribution. Finally, we ranked these distributions according to their profiling accuracy, based on the backward elimination method. RESULTS: This analysis revealed a statistically significant difference between the neurodegenerative phenotype and the wild type up to a 99.9% confidence interval. Differences between the wild type and phenotypes resulting from overexpression of the Bchs protein are detectable by contrast variations, whereas both size and contrast variations distinguish the wild type from either of the loss of function alleles bchs1 or bchs58. In contrast, the density measurement differentiates all three bchs phenotypes (loss of function as well as overexpression) from the wild type. CONCLUSION: Our model demonstrates that neurodegeneration-associated endolysosomal defects can be detected, analyzed, and classified rapidly and accurately as a diagnostic imaging-based screening tool.
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spelling pubmed-26395802009-02-11 Multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing Kumarasamy, Saravana K Wang, Yunshi Viswanathan, Vignesh Kraut, Rachel S BioData Min Methodology BACKGROUND: Dysfunction in the endolysosome, a late endosomal to lysosomal degradative intracellular compartment, is an early hallmark of some neurodegenerative diseases, in particular Alzheimer's disease. However, the subtle morphological changes in compartments of affected neurons are difficult to quantify quickly and reliably, making this phenotype inaccessible as either an early diagnostic marker, or as a read-out for drug screening. METHODS: We present a method for automatic detection of fluorescently labeled endolysosomes in degenerative neurons in situ. The Drosophila blue cheese (bchs) mutant was taken as a genetic neurodegenerative model for direct in situ visualization and quantification of endolysosomal compartments in affected neurons. Endolysosomal compartments were first detected automatically from 2-D image sections using a combination of point-wise multi-scale correlation and normalized correlation operations. This detection algorithm performed well at recognizing fluorescent endolysosomes, unlike conventional convolution methods, which are confounded by variable intensity levels and background noise. Morphological feature differences between endolysosomes from wild type vs. degenerative neurons were then quantified by multivariate profiling and support vector machine (SVM) classification based on compartment density, size and contrast distribution. Finally, we ranked these distributions according to their profiling accuracy, based on the backward elimination method. RESULTS: This analysis revealed a statistically significant difference between the neurodegenerative phenotype and the wild type up to a 99.9% confidence interval. Differences between the wild type and phenotypes resulting from overexpression of the Bchs protein are detectable by contrast variations, whereas both size and contrast variations distinguish the wild type from either of the loss of function alleles bchs1 or bchs58. In contrast, the density measurement differentiates all three bchs phenotypes (loss of function as well as overexpression) from the wild type. CONCLUSION: Our model demonstrates that neurodegeneration-associated endolysosomal defects can be detected, analyzed, and classified rapidly and accurately as a diagnostic imaging-based screening tool. BioMed Central 2008-11-14 /pmc/articles/PMC2639580/ /pubmed/19014586 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0381-1-10 Text en Copyright © 2008 Kumarasamy et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology
Kumarasamy, Saravana K
Wang, Yunshi
Viswanathan, Vignesh
Kraut, Rachel S
Multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing
title Multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing
title_full Multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing
title_fullStr Multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing
title_full_unstemmed Multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing
title_short Multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing
title_sort multivariate profiling of neurodegeneration-associated changes in a subcellular compartment of neurons via image processing
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2639580/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19014586
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1756-0381-1-10
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