论文标题
使用活动优先分配策略的活细胞显微镜的细胞跟踪
Cell tracking for live-cell microscopy using an activity-prioritized assignment strategy
论文作者
论文摘要
细胞跟踪是活细胞成像中必不可少的工具,以确定单细胞特征,例如分裂模式或伸长率。与常见的多个对象跟踪不同,在微生物活细胞实验中,细胞随着时间的流逝而生长,移动和分裂,以形成细胞菌落,这些细胞菌落密集包装在单层结构中。随着细胞数量的增加,由于可能的关联数量急剧增加,因此在许多世代正确地遵循精确的细胞细胞关联变得越来越具有挑战性。 为了应对这一挑战,我们提出了一种快速的无参数细胞跟踪方法,该方法由活动优先的邻居分配生长细胞和组合求解器组成,该组合求解器将分裂母细胞分配给女儿。作为跟踪的输入,例如分段使用无内液。与常规的基于邻居的跟踪方法不同,我们提出的方法的分配步骤基于基于高斯活动的度量,可预测细胞特定的迁移概率,从而限制了错误分配的数量。除了是用于细胞跟踪的构件外,提出的活动图是指示细胞活性的独立跟踪度量。最后,我们对不同帧速率的跟踪准确性进行定量分析,以告知生命科学家(在跟踪性能方面)选择其培养实验的帧速率(在跟踪性能方面),当时细胞轨道是所需的关键结果时。
Cell tracking is an essential tool in live-cell imaging to determine single-cell features, such as division patterns or elongation rates. Unlike in common multiple object tracking, in microbial live-cell experiments cells are growing, moving, and dividing over time, to form cell colonies that are densely packed in mono-layer structures. With increasing cell numbers, following the precise cell-cell associations correctly over many generations becomes more and more challenging, due to the massively increasing number of possible associations. To tackle this challenge, we propose a fast parameter-free cell tracking approach, which consists of activity-prioritized nearest neighbor assignment of growing cells and a combinatorial solver that assigns splitting mother cells to their daughters. As input for the tracking, Omnipose is utilized for instance segmentation. Unlike conventional nearest-neighbor-based tracking approaches, the assignment steps of our proposed method are based on a Gaussian activity-based metric, predicting the cell-specific migration probability, thereby limiting the number of erroneous assignments. In addition to being a building block for cell tracking, the proposed activity map is a standalone tracking-free metric for indicating cell activity. Finally, we perform a quantitative analysis of the tracking accuracy for different frame rates, to inform life scientists about a suitable (in terms of tracking performance) choice of the frame rate for their cultivation experiments, when cell tracks are the desired key outcome.