Deep-Channel uses deep neural networks to detect single-molecule events from patch-clamp data.

Journal: Communications biology
PMID:

Abstract

Single-molecule research techniques such as patch-clamp electrophysiology deliver unique biological insight by capturing the movement of individual proteins in real time, unobscured by whole-cell ensemble averaging. The critical first step in analysis is event detection, so called "idealisation", where noisy raw data are turned into discrete records of protein movement. To date there have been practical limitations in patch-clamp data idealisation; high quality idealisation is typically laborious and becomes infeasible and subjective with complex biological data containing many distinct native single-ion channel proteins gating simultaneously. Here, we show a deep learning model based on convolutional neural networks and long short-term memory architecture can automatically idealise complex single molecule activity more accurately and faster than traditional methods. There are no parameters to set; baseline, channel amplitude or numbers of channels for example. We believe this approach could revolutionise the unsupervised automatic detection of single-molecule transition events in the future.

Authors

  • Numan Celik
    Faculty of Health and Life Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
  • Fiona O'Brien
    Faculty of Health and Life Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
  • Sean Brennan
    Faculty of Health and Life Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
  • Richard D Rainbow
    Faculty of Health and Life Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
  • Caroline Dart
    Faculty of Health and Life Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
  • Yalin Zheng
    Department of Eye and Vision Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom.
  • Frans Coenen
    Department of Computer Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK.
  • Richard Barrett-Jolley
    Faculty of Health and Life Science, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK. rbj@liverpool.ac.uk.