Application of convolutional neural networks towards nuclei segmentation in localization-based super-resolution fluorescence microscopy images.

Journal: BMC bioinformatics
Published Date:

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Automated segmentation of nuclei in microscopic images has been conducted to enhance throughput in pathological diagnostics and biological research. Segmentation accuracy and speed has been significantly enhanced with the advent of convolutional neural networks. A barrier in the broad application of neural networks to nuclei segmentation is the necessity to train the network using a set of application specific images and image labels. Previous works have attempted to create broadly trained networks for universal nuclei segmentation; however, such networks do not work on all imaging modalities, and best results are still commonly found when the network is retrained on user specific data. Stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy (STORM) based super-resolution fluorescence microscopy has opened a new avenue to image nuclear architecture at nanoscale resolutions. Due to the large size and discontinuous features typical of super-resolution images, automatic nuclei segmentation can be difficult. In this study, we apply commonly used networks (Mask R-CNN and UNet architectures) towards the task of segmenting super-resolution images of nuclei. First, we assess whether networks broadly trained on conventional fluorescence microscopy datasets can accurately segment super-resolution images. Then, we compare the resultant segmentations with results obtained using networks trained directly on our super-resolution data. We next attempt to optimize and compare segmentation accuracy using three different neural network architectures.

Authors

  • Christopher A Mela
    Department of Biomedical Informatics, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
  • Yang Liu
    Department of Computer Science, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong, China.