Title :
Study of CuO Nanoparticle-induced Cell Death by High Content Cellular Fluorescence Imaging and Analysis
Author :
Zhou, Xiaobo ; Chen, Jian ; Zhu, Jinmin ; Li, Fuhai ; Huang, Xudong ; Wong, Stephen T C
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Brigham & Women´´s Hosp., Boston, MA
Abstract :
To quantify cellular toxic responses to drug treatment or environmental stresses such as nanoparticles, a high throughput imaging modality with automated image analysis protocol is applied. Fluorescence images from human H4 neurogliomal cells exposed to different concentrations of CuO nanoparticles were collected by a high content fluorescence microscopy. A fully automated fluorescent cellular image analysis system has been developed for the consequential image analysis for cell viability. A data-driven background algorithm was used as adaptive multiple thresholding algorithm to categorize the cells into three classes: bright cells, dark cells, and background. Our image analysis approach includes: (1) the scale-space theory, namely Gaussian filtering with proper scale has been applied to the acquired images to generate local intensity maxima within each cell; (2) a novel method for defining local image intensity maxima based on the gradient vector field has been developed; and (3) a statistical model was proposed to overcome the problem of cell segmentation. Our data have shown that the automated image analysis protocol can achieve 90% success rate of cell detection compared to manual procedure. Cellular image analysis further indicated that H4 neuroglioma cells had a dose-dependent toxic response to the insult of CuO nanoparticles.
Keywords :
cellular biophysics; copper compounds; fluorescence; image segmentation; medical image processing; microscopy; nanoparticles; statistical analysis; CuO; CuO nanoparticle-induced cell death; Gaussian filtering; adaptive multiple thresholding algorithm; automated image analysis protocol; cell detection; cell segmentation; cell viability; cellular toxic response; dose-dependent toxic response; drug treatment; environmental stress; fluorescence images; fully automated fluorescent cellular image analysis system; gradient vector field; high content cellular fluorescence imaging; high content fluorescence microscopy; high throughput imaging modality; human H4 neurogliomal cells; local image intensity maxima; scale-space theory; statistical model; Drugs; Filtering theory; Fluorescence; Humans; Image analysis; Microscopy; Nanoparticles; Protocols; Stress; Throughput; CuO nanoparticle; H4 neuroglioma cell; cell death; high content cell imaging;
Conference_Titel :
Circuits and Systems, 2007. ISCAS 2007. IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
New Orleans, LA
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0920-9
Electronic_ISBN :
1-4244-0921-7
DOI :
10.1109/ISCAS.2007.378773