Integrating deep learning and unbiased automated high-content screening to identify complex disease signatures in human fibroblasts
Drug discovery for diseases such as Parkinson’s disease are impeded by the lack of screenable cellular phenotypes. We present an unbiased phenotypic profiling platform that combines automated cell culture, high-content imaging, Cell Painting, and deep learning. We applied this platform to primary fi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature communications 2022-03, Vol.13 (1), p.1590-1590, Article 1590 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Drug discovery for diseases such as Parkinson’s disease are impeded by the lack of screenable cellular phenotypes. We present an unbiased phenotypic profiling platform that combines automated cell culture, high-content imaging, Cell Painting, and deep learning. We applied this platform to primary fibroblasts from 91 Parkinson’s disease patients and matched healthy controls, creating the largest publicly available Cell Painting image dataset to date at 48 terabytes. We use fixed weights from a convolutional deep neural network trained on ImageNet to generate deep embeddings from each image and train machine learning models to detect morphological disease phenotypes. Our platform’s robustness and sensitivity allow the detection of individual-specific variation with high fidelity across batches and plate layouts. Lastly, our models confidently separate
LRRK2
and sporadic Parkinson’s disease lines from healthy controls (receiver operating characteristic area under curve 0.79 (0.08 standard deviation)), supporting the capacity of this platform for complex disease modeling and drug screening applications.
By coupling robotic cell culture systems with artificial intelligence–powered image analysis, Schiff et al. identify previously unseen characteristics of Parkinson’s disease in patient skin cells that distinguish them from healthy controls. |
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ISSN: | 2041-1723 2041-1723 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-022-28423-4 |