A robust unsupervised machine-learning method to quantify the morphological heterogeneity of cells and nuclei

Jude M. Phillip, Kyu Sang Han, Wei Chiang Chen, Denis Wirtz, Pei Hsun Wu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cell morphology encodes essential information on many underlying biological processes. It is commonly used by clinicians and researchers in the study, diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of human diseases. Quantification of cell morphology has seen tremendous advances in recent years. However, effectively defining morphological shapes and evaluating the extent of morphological heterogeneity within cell populations remain challenging. Here we present a protocol and software for the analysis of cell and nuclear morphology from fluorescence or bright-field images using the VAMPIRE algorithm (https://github.com/kukionfr/VAMPIRE_open). This algorithm enables the profiling and classification of cells into shape modes based on equidistant points along cell and nuclear contours. Examining the distributions of cell morphologies across automatically identified shape modes provides an effective visualization scheme that relates cell shapes to cellular subtypes based on endogenous and exogenous cellular conditions. In addition, these shape mode distributions offer a direct and quantitative way to measure the extent of morphological heterogeneity within cell populations. This protocol is highly automated and fast, with the ability to quantify the morphologies from 2D projections of cells seeded both on 2D substrates or embedded within 3D microenvironments, such as hydrogels and tissues. The complete analysis pipeline can be completed within 60 minutes for a dataset of ~20,000 cells/2,400 images.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)754-774
Number of pages21
JournalNature protocols
Volume16
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2021

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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