4.3 Article

Semi-automated, high-content imaging of drug transporter knockout sea urchin (Lytechinus pictus) embryos

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jez.b.23231

Keywords

chemosensitization; convolutional neural network; drug screen; drug transporter; high content imaging; Lytechinus pictus

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The extreme fecundity and synchrony of sea urchins can be effectively utilized in imaging-based drug screens. By combining stable genetics, high content imaging, and machine learning-based image analysis, this study explores the role of a drug transporter in sea urchin embryos. The high-throughput assay and nested convolutional neural network analysis accurately classify embryos and measure their responses to drugs. The results reveal the increased sensitivity of ABCB1 knockout embryos to transporter substrates and mitotic poisons.
A defining feature of sea urchins is their extreme fecundity. Urchins produce millions of transparent, synchronously developing embryos, ideal for spatial and temporal analysis of development. This biological feature has been effectively utilized for ensemble measurement of biochemical changes. However, it has been underutilized in imaging studies, where single embryo measurements are used. Here we present an example of how stable genetics and high content imaging, along with machine learning-based image analysis, can be used to exploit the fecundity and synchrony of sea urchins in imaging-based drug screens. Building upon our recently created sea urchin ABCB1 knockout line, we developed a high-throughput assay to probe the role of this drug transporter in embryos. We used high content imaging to compare accumulation and toxicity of canonical substrates and inhibitors of the transporter, including fluorescent molecules and antimitotic cancer drugs, in homozygous knockout and wildtype embryos. To measure responses from the resulting image data, we used a nested convolutional neural network, which rapidly classified embryos according to fluorescence or cell division. This approach identified sea urchin embryos with 99.8% accuracy and determined two-cell and aberrant embryos with 96.3% and 89.1% accuracy, respectively. The results revealed that ABCB1 knockout embryos accumulated the transporter substrate calcein 3.09 times faster than wildtypes. Similarly, knockouts were 4.71 and 3.07 times more sensitive to the mitotic poisons vinblastine and taxol. This study paves the way for large scale pharmacological screens in the sea urchin embryo.

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