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Changes of Mass Spectra Patterns on a Brain Tissue Section Revealed by Deep Learning with Imaging Mass Spectrometry Data.

Hidemoto YamadaLili XuFumihiro EtoRei TakeichiAriful IslamMd Ai MamunChi ZhangIkuko YaoTakumi SakamotoShuhei AramakiKenji KikushimaTomohito SatoYutaka TakahashiManabu MachidaTomoaki KahyoMitsutoshi Setou
Published in: Journal of the American Society for Mass Spectrometry (2022)
The characteristic patterns of mass spectra in imaging mass spectrometry (IMS) strongly reflect the tissue environment. However, the boundaries formed where different tissue environments collide have not been visually assessed. In this study, IMS and convolutional neural network (CNN), one of the deep learning methods, were applied to the extraction of characteristic mass spectra patterns from training brain regions on rodents' brain sections. CNN produced classification models with high accuracy and low loss rate in any test data sets of mouse coronal sections measured by desorption electrospray ionization (DESI)-IMS and of mouse and rat sagittal sections by matrix-assisted laser desorption (MALDI)-IMS. On the basis of the extracted mass spectra pattern features, the histologically plausible segmentation and classification score imaging of the brain sections were obtained. The boundary imaging generated from classification scores showed the extreme changes of mass spectra patterns between the tissue environments, with no significant buffer zones for the intermediate state. The CNN-based analysis of IMS data is a useful tool for visually assessing the changes of mass spectra patterns on a tissue section, and it will contribute to a comprehensive view of the tissue environment.
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