DocumentCode
2381273
Title
Cell cycle dependence of protein subcellular location inferred from static, asynchronous images
Author
Buck, Taráz E. ; Rao, Arvind ; Coelho, Luís Pedro ; Fuhrman, Margaret H. ; Jarvik, Jonathan W. ; Berget, Peter B. ; Murphy, Robert F.
Author_Institution
Lane Center for Comput. Biol., Carnegie Mellon Univ., Pittsburgh, PA, USA
fYear
2009
fDate
3-6 Sept. 2009
Firstpage
1016
Lastpage
1019
Abstract
Protein subcellular location is one of the most important determinants of protein function during cellular processes. Changes in protein behavior during the cell cycle are expected to be involved in cellular reprogramming during disease and development, and there is therefore a critical need to understand cell-cycle dependent variation in protein localization which may be related to aberrant pathway activity. With this goal, it would be useful to have an automated method that can be applied on a proteomic scale to identify candidate proteins showing cell-cycle dependent variation of location. Fluorescence microscopy, and especially automated, high-throughput microscopy, can provide images for tens of thousands of fluorescently-tagged proteins for this purpose. Previous work on analysis of cell cycle variation has traditionally relied on obtaining time-series images over an entire cell cycle; these methods are not applicable to the single time point images that are much easier to obtain on a large scale. Hence a method that can infer cell cycle-dependence of proteins from asynchronous, static cell images would be preferable. In this work, we demonstrate such a method that can associate protein pattern variation in static images with cell cycle progression. We additionally show that a one-dimensional parameterization of cell cycle progression and protein feature pattern is sufficient to infer association between localization and cell cycle.
Keywords
bio-optics; biological techniques; cellular biophysics; fluorescence; molecular biophysics; optical microscopy; proteins; proteomics; cell cycle dependence; cell cycle progression; cellular process; cellular reprogramming; fluorescence microscopy; fluorescently-tagged protein; protein feature pattern; protein localization; protein pattern variation; protein subcellular location; proteomic scale; static asynchronous images; Animals; Cell Cycle; Cell Cycle Proteins; Hela Cells; Humans; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Mice; Microscopy, Fluorescence; NIH 3T3 Cells; Subcellular Fractions;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society, 2009. EMBC 2009. Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location
Minneapolis, MN
ISSN
1557-170X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-3296-7
Electronic_ISBN
1557-170X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEMBS.2009.5332888
Filename
5332888
Link To Document