skip to main content


Title: Multispectral tracing in densely labeled mouse brain with nTracer
Abstract Summary

This note describes nTracer, an ImageJ plug-in for user-guided, semi-automated tracing of multispectral fluorescent tissue samples. This approach allows for rapid and accurate reconstruction of whole cell morphology of large neuronal populations in densely labeled brains.

Availability and implementation

nTracer was written as a plug-in for the open source image processing software ImageJ. The software, instructional documentation, tutorial videos, sample image and sample tracing results are available at https://www.cai-lab.org/ntracer-tutorial.

Supplementary information

Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

 
more » « less
NSF-PAR ID:
10394367
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
Publisher / Repository:
Oxford University Press
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Bioinformatics
Volume:
35
Issue:
18
ISSN:
1367-4803
Page Range / eLocation ID:
p. 3544-3546
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
More Like this
  1. Abstract Summary

    FunImageJ is a Lisp framework for scientific image processing built upon the ImageJ software ecosystem. The framework provides a natural functional-style for programming, while accounting for the performance requirements necessary in big data processing commonly encountered in biological image analysis.

    Availability and implementation

    Freely available plugin to Fiji (http://fiji.sc/#download). Installation and use instructions available at http://imagej.net/FunImageJ.

    Supplementary information

    Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

     
    more » « less
  2. Xu, Jinbo (Ed.)
    Abstract Summary Spectroscopic single-molecule localization microscopy (sSMLM) simultaneously captures the spatial locations and full spectra of stochastically emitting fluorescent single molecules. It provides an optical platform to develop new multimolecular and functional imaging capabilities. While several open-source software suites provide subdiffraction localization of fluorescent molecules, software suites for spectroscopic analysis of sSMLM data remain unavailable. RainbowSTORM is an open-source ImageJ/FIJI plug-in for end-to-end spectroscopic analysis and visualization for sSMLM images. RainbowSTORM allows users to calibrate, preview and quantitatively analyze emission spectra acquired using different reported sSMLM system designs and fluorescent labels. Availability and implementation RainbowSTORM is a java plug-in for ImageJ (https://imagej.net)/FIJI (http://fiji.sc) freely available through: https://github.com/FOIL-NU/RainbowSTORM. RainbowSTORM has been tested with Windows and Mac operating systems and ImageJ/FIJI version 1.52. Supplementary information Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online. 
    more » « less
  3. Abstract Motivation

    Cell shape provides both geometry for, and a reflection of, cell function. Numerous methods for describing and modeling cell shape have been described, but previous evaluation of these methods in terms of the accuracy of generative models has been limited.

    Results

    Here we compare traditional methods and deep autoencoders to build generative models for cell shapes in terms of the accuracy with which shapes can be reconstructed from models. We evaluated the methods on different collections of 2D and 3D cell images, and found that none of the methods gave accurate reconstructions using low dimensional encodings. As expected, much higher accuracies were observed using high dimensional encodings, with outline-based methods significantly outperforming image-based autoencoders. The latter tended to encode all cells as having smooth shapes, even for high dimensions. For complex 3D cell shapes, we developed a significant improvement of a method based on the spherical harmonic transform that performs significantly better than other methods. We obtained similar results for the joint modeling of cell and nuclear shape. Finally, we evaluated the modeling of shape dynamics by interpolation in the shape space. We found that our modified method provided lower deformation energies along linear interpolation paths than other methods. This allows practical shape evolution in high dimensional shape spaces. We conclude that our improved spherical harmonic based methods are preferable for cell and nuclear shape modeling, providing better representations, higher computational efficiency and requiring fewer training images than deep learning methods.

    Availability and implementation

    All software and data is available at http://murphylab.cbd.cmu.edu/software.

    Supplementary information

    Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

     
    more » « less
  4. Abstract Motivation

    The somatic mutations in the pathways that drive cancer development tend to be mutually exclusive across tumors, providing a signal for distinguishing driver mutations from a larger number of random passenger mutations. This mutual exclusivity signal can be confounded by high and highly variable mutation rates across a cohort of samples. Current statistical tests for exclusivity that incorporate both per-gene and per-sample mutational frequencies are computationally expensive and have limited precision.

    Results

    We formulate a weighted exact test for assessing the significance of mutual exclusivity in an arbitrary number of mutational events. Our test conditions on the number of samples with a mutation as well as per-event, per-sample mutation probabilities. We provide a recursive formula to compute P-values for the weighted test exactly as well as a highly accurate and efficient saddlepoint approximation of the test. We use our test to approximate a commonly used permutation test for exclusivity that conditions on per-event, per-sample mutation frequencies. However, our test is more efficient and it recovers more significant results than the permutation test. We use our Weighted Exclusivity Test (WExT) software to analyze hundreds of colorectal and endometrial samples from The Cancer Genome Atlas, which are two cancer types that often have extremely high mutation rates. On both cancer types, the weighted test identifies sets of mutually exclusive mutations in cancer genes with fewer false positives than earlier approaches.

    Availability and Implementation

    See http://compbio.cs.brown.edu/projects/wext for software.

    Contact

    braphael@cs.brown.edu

    Supplementary information

    Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

     
    more » « less
  5. Abstract Motivation

    High throughput chromosome conformation capture (Hi-C) contact matrices are used to predict 3D chromatin structures in eukaryotic cells. High-resolution Hi-C data are less available than low-resolution Hi-C data due to sequencing costs but provide greater insight into the intricate details of 3D chromatin structures such as enhancer–promoter interactions and sub-domains. To provide a cost-effective solution to high-resolution Hi-C data collection, deep learning models are used to predict high-resolution Hi-C matrices from existing low-resolution matrices across multiple cell types.

    Results

    Here, we present two Cascading Residual Networks called HiCARN-1 and HiCARN-2, a convolutional neural network and a generative adversarial network, that use a novel framework of cascading connections throughout the network for Hi-C contact matrix prediction from low-resolution data. Shown by image evaluation and Hi-C reproducibility metrics, both HiCARN models, overall, outperform state-of-the-art Hi-C resolution enhancement algorithms in predictive accuracy for both human and mouse 1/16, 1/32, 1/64 and 1/100 downsampled high-resolution Hi-C data. Also, validation by extracting topologically associating domains, chromosome 3D structure and chromatin loop predictions from the enhanced data shows that HiCARN can proficiently reconstruct biologically significant regions.

    Availability and implementation

    HiCARN can be accessed and utilized as an open-sourced software at: https://github.com/OluwadareLab/HiCARN and is also available as a containerized application that can be run on any platform.

    Supplementary information

    Supplementary data are available at Bioinformatics online.

     
    more » « less