SLAS Discovery (Apr 2023)

Automated quality control tool for high-content imaging data by building 2D prediction intervals on reference biosignatures

  • Alemu Takele Assefa,
  • Bie Verbist,
  • Emmanuel Gustin,
  • Danielle Peeters

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 3
pp. 111 – 117

Abstract

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Recent advances in automated microscopy and image analysis enables quantitative profiling of cellular phenotypes (Cell Painting). It paves the way for studying the broad effects of chemical perturbations on biological systems at large scale during lead optimization. Comparison of perturbation biosignatures with biosignatures of annotated compounds can inform on both on- and off-target effects. When building databases with phenotypic profiles of thousands of compounds, it is vital to control the quality of Cell Painting assays over time. A tool for this to our knowledge does not yet exist within the imaging community. In this paper, we introduce an automated tool to assess the quality of Cell Painting assays by quantifying the reproducibility of biosignatures of annotated reference compounds. The tool learns the biosignature of those treatments from a historical dataset, and subsequently, it builds a two-dimensional probabilistic quality control (QC) limit. The limit will then be used to detect aberrations in new Cell Painting experiments. The tool is illustrated using simulated data and further demonstrated on Cell Painting data of the A549 cell line. In general, the tool provides a sensitive, detailed and easy-to-interpret mechanism to validate the quality of Cell Painting assays.

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