4.3 Article

Intensity calibration and automated cell cycle gating for high-throughput image-based siRNA screens of mammalian cells

Journal

CYTOMETRY PART A
Volume 73A, Issue 10, Pages 904-917

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cyto.a.20624

Keywords

fluorescence intensity calibration; background correction; cell cycle gating; high throughput imaging; image preprocessing; high throughput cell cycle analysis; automatic cell cycle gating

Ask authors/readers for more resources

High-content microscopic screening systems are powerful tools for extracting quantitative multiparameter measures from large number of cells under numerous conditions. These systems perform well in applications that monitor the presence of objects, but lack in their ability to accurately estimate object intensities and summarize these findings due to variations in background, aberrations in illumination, and variability in staining over the image and/or sample wells. We present effective and automated methods that are applicable to analyzing in tensity-based cell cycle assays under high-throughput screening conditions. We characterize the system aberration response from images of calibration beads and then enhance the detection and segmentation accuracy of traditional algorithms by preprocessing images for local background variations. We also provide a rapid, adaptive, cell-cycle partitioning algorithm to characterize each sample well based on the estimated locally and globally corrected cell intensity measures of BrdU and DAPI incorporation. We demonstrated the utility and range of our cell ploidy and probe density measurement methods in a pilot screen using a siRNA library against 779 human protein kinases. With our method, multiple image-based quantitative phenotypes can be realized from a single high-throughput image-based microtiterplate screen. (C) 2008 International Society for Advancement of Cytometry.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available