| Literature DB >> 32442229 |
Tamara Weiss1, Lorenz Semmler1, Flavia Millesi1, Anda Mann1, Maximilian Haertinger1, Manuel Salzmann2, Christine Radtke1,3.
Abstract
In response to injury, adult Schwann cells (SCs) re-enter the cell cycle, change their expression profile, and exert repair functions important for wound healing and the re-growth of axons. While this phenotypical instability of SCs is essential for nerve regeneration, it has also been implicated in cancer progression and de-myelinating neuropathies. Thus, SCs became an important research tool to study the molecular mechanisms involved in repair and disease and to identify targets for therapeutic intervention. A high purity of isolated SC cultures used for experimentation must be demonstrated to exclude that novel findings are derived from a contaminating fibroblasts population. In addition, information about the SC proliferation status is an important parameter to be determined in response to different treatments. The evaluation of SC purity and proliferation, however, usually depends on the time consuming, manual assessment of immunofluorescence stainings or comes with the sacrifice of a large amount of SCs for flow cytometry analysis. We here show that rat SC culture derived cytospins stained for SC marker SOX10, proliferation marker EdU, intermediate filament vimentin and DAPI allowed the determination of SC identity and proliferation by requiring only a small number of cells. Furthermore, the CellProfiler software was used to develop an automated image analysis pipeline that quantified SCs and proliferating SCs from the obtained immunofluorescence images. By comparing the results of total cell count, SC purity and SC proliferation rate between manual counting and the CellProfiler output, we demonstrated applicability and reliability of the established pipeline. In conclusion, we here combined the cytospin technique, a multi-colour immunofluorescence staining panel, and an automated image analysis pipeline to enable the quantification of SC purity and SC proliferation from small cell aliquots. This procedure represents a solid read-out to simplify and standardize the quantification of primary SC culture purity and proliferation.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32442229 PMCID: PMC7244157 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0233647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Evaluation of SC and proliferation markers on grown SC cultures and cytospins.
(a,b) Phase contrast images of representative rat SC cultures with spindle-shaped SCs and flattened FBs (arrowheads). (c) Phase contrast image of a SC cytospin. (d,e) Immunofluorescence staining of grown SCs for (d1,e1) S100, (e2,e2) SOX10, (d3,e3) VIME, (d4,e4) DAPI and (d5, e5) merged channels; arrowheads mark S100-/SOX10-/VIME+ FBs. (f) Representative cytospin image of SCs stained for (f1) SOX10, (f2) VIME, (f3) DAPI and (f4) merged channels; magenta arrowheads point to a SOX10+ cell nucleus, white arrowheads indicate a SOX10- mitotic cell. (g) Representative cytospin image of SCs stained for (g1) S100, (g2) VIME, (g3) DAPI and (g4) merged channels; green arrowheads show a S100+/VIME+ SC, white arrowheads refer to a VIME+ FB with S100 background staining. Immunofluorescence staining of (h) grown SCs and (i) SC cytospins for (h1,i1) SOX10, (h2,i2) EdU, (h3,i3) VIME, (h4,i4) DAPI and (h5, i5) merged channels; white arrowheads mark SOX10-/VIME+ FBs, magenta arrowheads mark SOX10+/EdU+/VIME+ proliferating SCs.
CellProfiler pipeline with used modules and settings.
| Function | Module | Setting | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1) IdentifyPrimaryObjects | Object diameter in pixel units: 16–60 | ||
| Global threshold strategy | |||
| two-classes Otsu threshold method | |||
| smoothening scale: 1.3488 | |||
| correction factor: 0.7 | |||
| lower and upper bound threshold: 0.0 and 1.0 | |||
| distinguish clumped objects: shape | |||
| dividing line between clumped objects: propagate | |||
| 2) MeasureObjectSizeShape | Use defaults | ||
| 3) FilterObjects | AreaShape measurement by FormFactor with a minimum value of 0.599 | ||
| 4) MeasureObjectIntensity | Use defaults | ||
| 5) DisplayDataOnImage | Use defaults | ||
| 6) FilterObjects | filtering mode: Measurement | ||
| Filtering method: Limit | |||
| MeanIntensity with a minimum value of the defined threshold | |||
| 7) MeasureObjectIntensity | Use defaults | ||
| 8) DisplayDataOnImage | Use defaults | ||
| 9) FilterObjects | Filtering mode: Measurement | ||
| Filtering method: Limit | |||
| MeanIntensity with a minimum value of the defined threshold | |||
| 10) IdentifySecondaryObjects | Propagation from identified real nuclei | ||
| Global threshold strategy | |||
| two-classes Otsu threshold method | |||
| smoothening scale: 1.3488 | |||
| correction factor: 0.9 | |||
| lower and upper bound threshold: 0.0 and 1.0 | |||
| regularization factor: 0.1 | |||
| 11) MeasureObjectSizeShape | Use defaults | ||
| 12) MeasureObjectIntensity | Use defaults | ||
| 13) FilterObjects | filtering mode: Measurement | ||
| Filtering method: Limit | |||
| AreaShape Measurement by Area | |||
| Minimum | |||
| Intensity measurement by MeanIntensity based on VIME stain with a minimal value of 0.000009, | |||
| AreaShape measurement by FormFactor with a minimum value of 0.35 | |||
| 14) DisplayDataOnImage | Use defaults | ||
| 15) DisplayDataOnImage | Use defaults | ||
| 16) DisplayDataOnImage | Use defaults | ||
| 17) ClassifyObjects | Use defaults | ||
| 18) ClassifyObjects | Use defaults | ||
| 19) SaveImages | Use defaults | ||
| 20) SaveImages | Use defaults | ||
| 21) SaveImages | Use defaults | ||
| 22) SaveImages | Use defaults | ||
| 23) SaveImages | Use defaults | ||
| 24) SaveImages | Use defaults | ||
| 25) SaveImages | Use defaults | ||
| 26) ExportToSpreadsheet | Use defaults |
Fig 2Overview of the automated image analysis segmenting results.
(a-d) illustrate representative image analysis steps of the established pipeline using CellProfler. (a-d, 1–3) show the identification of real nuclei based on the DAPI stain, (a-d, 4–6) illustrate the determination of SOX10+ real nuclei and (a-d, 7–9) the determination of SOX10+/EdU+ real nuclei based on the SOX10 and EdU staining intensities, respectively. The VIME stain was used to exclude burst cell bodies and to identify real cells (a-d, 9–12) from which the number of real cells (a-d, 13), SOX10 real cells (a-d, 14) and SOX10/EdU real cells (a-d, 15) were determined.
Fig 3Comparison of CellProfiler and manual counting results.
The diagrams show the calculated (a) numbers of DAPI+/VIME+ real cells, (b) percentages of SOX10 real cells (= SC culture purity) and (c) percentage of SOX10/EdU real cells (= proliferating SCs) obtained by either manual counting (circles) or the CellProfiler pipeline (squares) ±SD in 3 donors; n.s. … not significant.
Antibodies.
| S100 | rabbit | DAKO | 1:200 |
| SOX10 | mouse | Santa Cruz | 1:50 |
| vimentin | chicken | Invitrogen | 1:200 |
| Fluorophore | company | dilution | |
| rabbit | AF488P | Invitrogen | 1:600 |
| mouse | AF594 | Invitrogen | 1:300 |
| mouse | AF488 | Invitrogen | 1:300 |
| chicken | DL650 | Invitrogen | 1:300 |