Mapping of structural arrangement of cells and collective calcium transients: an integrated framework combining live cell imaging using confocal microscopy and UMAP-assisted HDBSCAN-based approach.

GPCR targeting drug HDBSCAN SSDD UMAP calcium imaging cell-to-cell connectivity confocal microscopy t-SNE

Journal

Integrative biology : quantitative biosciences from nano to macro
ISSN: 1757-9708
Titre abrégé: Integr Biol (Camb)
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101478378

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
30 12 2022
Historique:
received: 25 05 2022
revised: 22 11 2022
accepted: 30 11 2022
pubmed: 22 1 2023
medline: 10 3 2023
entrez: 21 1 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Live cell calcium (Ca2+) imaging is one of the important tools to record cellular activity during in vitro and in vivo preclinical studies. Specially, high-resolution microscopy can provide valuable dynamic information at the single cell level. One of the major challenges in the implementation of such imaging schemes is to extract quantitative information in the presence of significant heterogeneity in Ca2+ responses attained due to variation in structural arrangement and drug distribution. To fill this gap, we propose time-lapse imaging using spinning disk confocal microscopy and machine learning-enabled framework for automated grouping of Ca2+ spiking patterns. Time series analysis is performed to correlate the drug induced cellular responses to self-assembly pattern present in multicellular systems. The framework is designed to reduce the large-scale dynamic responses using uniform manifold approximation and projection (UMAP). In particular, we propose the suitability of hierarchical DBSCAN (HDBSCAN) in view of reduced number of hyperparameters. We find UMAP-assisted HDBSCAN outperforms existing approaches in terms of clustering accuracy in segregation of Ca2+ spiking patterns. One of the novelties includes the application of non-linear dimension reduction in segregation of the Ca2+ transients with statistical similarity. The proposed pipeline for automation was also proved to be a reproducible and fast method with minimal user input. The algorithm was used to quantify the effect of cellular arrangement and stimulus level on collective Ca2+ responses induced by GPCR targeting drug. The analysis revealed a significant increase in subpopulation containing sustained oscillation corresponding to higher packing density. In contrast to traditional measurement of rise time and decay ratio from Ca2+ transients, the proposed pipeline was used to classify the complex patterns with longer duration and cluster-wise model fitting. The two-step process has a potential implication in deciphering biophysical mechanisms underlying the Ca2+ oscillations in context of structural arrangement between cells.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36670549
pii: 6994396
doi: 10.1093/intbio/zyac017
doi:

Substances chimiques

Calcium SY7Q814VUP

Types de publication

Journal Article Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

184-203

Informations de copyright

© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Auteurs

Suman Gare (S)

Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad, India.

Soumita Chel (S)

Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad, India.

T K Abhinav (TK)

Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad, India.

Vaibhav Dhyani (V)

Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad, India.

Soumya Jana (S)

Department of Electrical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad, India.

Lopamudra Giri (L)

Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology, Hyderabad, India.

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