Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: Multispectral fluorescence imaging coupled with linear unmixing is a form of image data collection and analysis that allows for measuring multiple molecular signals in a single biological sample. Multiple fluorescent dyes, each measuring a unique molecule, are simultaneously measured and subsequently "unmixed" to provide a read-out for each molecular signal. This strategy allows for measuring highly multiplexed signals in a single data capture session, such as multiple proteins or RNAs in tissue slices or cultured cells, but can often result in mixed signals and bleed-through problems across dyes. Existing spectral unmixing algorithms are not optimized for challenging biological specimens such as post-mortem human brain tissue, and often require manual intervention to extract spectral signatures. We therefore developed an intuitive, automated, and flexible package called SUFI: spectral unmixing of fluorescent images.

Results: This package unmixes multispectral fluorescence images by automating the extraction of spectral signatures using vertex component analysis, and then performs one of three unmixing algorithms derived from remote sensing. We evaluate these remote sensing algorithms' performances on four unique biological datasets and compare the results to unmixing results obtained using ZEN Black software (Zeiss). We lastly integrate our unmixing pipeline into the computational tool dotdotdot, which is used to quantify individual RNA transcripts at single cell resolution in intact tissues and perform differential expression analysis, and thereby provide an end-to-end solution for multispectral fluorescence image analysis and quantification.

Conclusions: In summary, we provide a robust, automated pipeline to assist biologists with improved spectral unmixing of multispectral fluorescence images.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9878864PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12868-022-00765-1DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

spectral unmixing
16
multispectral fluorescence
16
unmixing
8
unmixing fluorescent
8
post-mortem human
8
human brain
8
allows measuring
8
signals single
8
unmixing algorithms
8
spectral signatures
8

Similar Publications

Spectral imaging is a fluorescence microscopy technique with several applications, including imaging of environment-sensitive probes, spectral unmixing and identification of fluorescent species. In confocal microscopes not equipped with a spectral detection unit, spectral images can be obtained using the lambda scan mode of the microscope, namely the sequential acquisition of images using a tunable emission filter or other dispersive optical elements. Unfortunately, the lambda scan mode has poor temporal resolution, is a photon-wasting technique, and is not ideal for the spectral imaging of live samples.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Pesticide residue analysis of agricultural produce is vital because of associated health concerns, highlighting the need for effective non-destructive techniques. This study introduces a method that combines short-wavelength infrared hyperspectral imaging with spectral unmixing to detect chlorfenapyr and azoxystrobin residues on perilla leaves. Sixty-six leaves were treated with pesticides at concentrations between 0 and 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Technologic advances in flow cytometry.

Clin Chim Acta

August 2025

The First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Department of Laboratory Diagnostics, Harbin 150001, China. Electronic address:

Flow cytometry, as a groundbreaking technique in single-cell analysis, has evolved into a multi-dimensional technical framework over six decades of development. This paper systematically reviews its technological progression, ranging from conventional fluorescence labeling to spectral unmixing in spectral flow cytometry, advancements in metal tagging within mass cytometry, morphological and functional synchronous analysis in imaging flow cytometry, and ultimately achieving sub-micron-level detection in nanoparticle flow cytometry. Each technological advancement has expanded the boundaries of biological understanding.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Efficient inspection of variation in water quality is of paramount importance to environmental protection and management of urban rivers. With remote sensing techniques prevailing in environmental monitoring in recent years, unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) remote sensing has been applied to retrieve water quality parameters (WQPs) involving hyperspectral data and posed a great opportunity for flexible and effective water quality monitoring. However, current methods usually entailed more cost-prohibitive water samples to predict a few WQPs without a unified framework.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Staining panels have become increasingly complex in recent years, with 40 to 50 dye panels regularly reported, particularly on "spectral" flow cytometers. It is universal practice to include all dyes in the mixing matrix when unmixing the data, even though it is well-known that individual events within the sample only stain with a subset of dyes. Adding dyes to the mixing matrix increases the variance of the unmixed abundance distributions, even if those dyes are not present on particular events.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF