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1.
Biophys J ; 120(3): 393-401, 2021 02 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33359170

ABSTRACT

Label-free imaging techniques such as differential interference contrast (DIC) allow the observation of cells and large subcellular structures in their native, unperturbed states with minimal exposure to light. The development of robust computational image-analysis routines is vital to quantitative label-free imaging. The reliability of quantitative analysis of time-series microscopy data based on single-particle tracking relies on accurately detecting objects as distinct from the background, i.e., segmentation. Typical approaches to segmenting DIC images either involve converting images to those resembling phase contrast, mimicking the optics of DIC object formation, or using the morphological properties of objects. Here, we describe MATLAB based, single-particle tracking tool with a GUI for mobility analysis of objects from in vitro and in vivo DIC time-series microscopy. The tool integrates contrast enhancement with multiple modified Gaussian filters, automated threshold detection for segmentation and minimal distance-based two-dimensional single-particle tracking. We compare the relative performance of multiple filters and demonstrate the utility of the tool for DIC object tracking (DICOT). We quantify subcellular dynamics of a time series of Caenorhabditis elegans embryos in the one-celled stage by detecting birefringent yolk granules in the cytoplasm with high precision. The resulting two-dimensional map of oscillatory dynamics of granules quantifies the cytoplasmic flows driven by anaphasic spindle oscillations. The frequency of oscillations across the anterior-posterior (A-P) and transverse axes of the embryo correspond well with the reported frequency of spindle oscillations. We validate the quantitative accuracy of our method by tracking the in vitro diffusive mobility of micron-sized beads in glycerol solutions. Estimates of the diffusion coefficients of the granules are used to measure the viscosity of a dilution series of glycerol. Thus, our computational method is likely to be useful for both intracellular mobility and in vitro microrheology.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Animals , Microscopy, Interference , Microscopy, Phase-Contrast , Reproducibility of Results
2.
PLoS One ; 11(12): e0167620, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27992448

ABSTRACT

Kymographs or space-time plots are widely used in cell biology to reduce the dimensions of a time-series in microscopy for both qualitative and quantitative insight into spatio-temporal dynamics. While multiple tools for image kymography have been described before, quantification remains largely manual. Here, we describe a novel software tool for automated multi-peak tracking kymography (AMTraK), which uses peak information and distance minimization to track and automatically quantify kymographs, integrated in a GUI. The program takes fluorescence time-series data as an input and tracks contours in the kymographs based on intensity and gradient peaks. By integrating a branch-point detection method, it can be used to identify merging and splitting events of tracks, important in separation and coalescence events. In tests with synthetic images, we demonstrate sub-pixel positional accuracy of the program. We test the program by quantifying sub-cellular dynamics in rod-shaped bacteria, microtubule (MT) transport and vesicle dynamics. A time-series of E. coli cell division with labeled nucleoid DNA is used to identify the time-point and rate at which the nucleoid segregates. The mean velocity of microtubule (MT) gliding motility due to a recombinant kinesin motor is estimated as 0.5 µm/s, in agreement with published values, and comparable to estimates using software for nanometer precision filament-tracking. We proceed to employ AMTraK to analyze previously published time-series microscopy data where kymographs had been manually quantified: clathrin polymerization kinetics during vesicle formation and anterograde and retrograde transport in axons. AMTraK analysis not only reproduces the reported parameters, it also provides an objective and automated method for reproducible analysis of kymographs from in vitro and in vivo fluorescence microscopy time-series of sub-cellular dynamics.


Subject(s)
Kymography/methods , Microtubules/physiology , Biological Transport , Cell Movement , Chromosome Segregation , Escherichia coli/genetics , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Fluorescence , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods , Software
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