DocumentCode :
2356412
Title :
Imaging mass spectrometry based exploration of biochemical tissue composition using peak intensity weighted PCA
Author :
Van de Plas, Raf ; De Moor, Bart ; Waelkens, Etienne
Author_Institution :
Katholieke Univ. Leuven, Leuven
fYear :
2007
fDate :
8-9 Nov. 2007
Firstpage :
209
Lastpage :
212
Abstract :
Imaging mass spectrometry or mass spectral imaging (MSI) is a technology that provides us with the opportunity to study the spatial distribution of biomolecules such as proteins, peptides, and metabolites throughout organic tissue sections. MSI adds a spatial dimension to mass spectrometry and biomarker-oriented studies without the requirement for labels, as is the case with more traditional techniques such as fluorescense microscopy. It has particular merit for studies where no prior hypothesis of target molecules is available, as it can simultaneously track a wide range of molecules within its mass range. This makes MSI a potent exploratory tool for elucidating the spatiobiochemical topology in tissue. This paper elaborates on the principal component analysis (PCA)-based unsupervised decomposition of an MSI-measured organic tissue section into its underlying biochemical trends. We introduce a method to control the weight that particular peak intensity ranges are allowed to exert on the final decomposition model. The extension provides a way for peak intensity-based scaling to be incorporated directly into the decomposition process, for the purpose of denoising or contrast enhancement. The method makes use of peak height transformations that are conceptually equivalent to what is known in digital image processing as gray level transformations, but rather than aiming to enhance contrast for human interpretation they are used to influence the unsupervised decomposition process. As an example, we apply a combined denoising/contrast stretching measure to the MSI-measurement of a section of rat spinal cord.
Keywords :
biochemistry; biological tissues; biomedical optical imaging; fluorescence; image denoising; image enhancement; mass spectra; mass spectroscopic chemical analysis; medical image processing; neurophysiology; optical microscopy; principal component analysis; biochemical tissue composition; biomolecular patial distribution; contrast enhancement; denoising; digital image processing; fluorescense microscopy; gray level transformations; imaging mass spectrometry; intensity-based scaling; mass spectral imaging; metabolites; peak intensity weighted PCA; peptides; principal component analysis; proteins; rat spinal cord; spatiobiochemical topology; unsupervised decomposition; Fluorescence; Mass spectroscopy; Microscopy; Molecular biophysics; Noise reduction; Peptides; Principal component analysis; Proteins; Target tracking; Topology;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Life Science Systems and Applications Workshop, 2007. LISA 2007. IEEE/NIH
Conference_Location :
Bethesda, MD
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1813-8
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-1813-8
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/LSSA.2007.4400921
Filename :
4400921
Link To Document :
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