Frontiers in Nanotechnology (May 2023)

Following nanoparticle uptake by cells using high-throughput microscopy and the deep-learning based cell identification algorithm Cellpose

  • Boxuan Yang,
  • Ceri J. Richards,
  • Timea B. Gandek,
  • Isa de Boer,
  • Itxaso Aguirre-Zuazo,
  • Else Niemeijer,
  • Christoffer Åberg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnano.2023.1181362
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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How many nanoparticles are taken up by human cells is a key question for many applications, both within medicine and safety. While many methods have been developed and applied to this question, microscopy-based methods present some unique advantages. However, the laborious nature of microscopy, in particular the consequent image analysis, remains a bottleneck. Automated image analysis has been pursued to remedy this situation, but offers its own challenges. Here we tested the recently developed deep-learning based cell identification algorithm Cellpose on fluorescence microscopy images of HeLa cells. We found that the algorithm performed very well, and hence developed a workflow that allowed us to acquire, and analyse, thousands of cells in a relatively modest amount of time, without sacrificing cell identification accuracy. We subsequently tested the workflow on images of cells exposed to fluorescently-labelled polystyrene nanoparticles. This dataset was then used to study the relationship between cell size and nanoparticle uptake, a subject where high-throughput microscopy is of particular utility.

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