Precise co-registration of mass spectrometry imaging, histology, and laser microdissection-based omics.
Frédéric DewezMarta Martin-LorenzoMichael HerfsDominique BaiwirGabriel MazzucchelliEdwin De PauwRon M A HeerenBenjamin BalluffPublished in: Analytical and bioanalytical chemistry (2019)
Mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) is an analytical technique for the unlabeled and multiplex imaging of molecules in biological tissue sections. It therefore enables the spatial and molecular annotations of tissues complementary to histology. It has already been shown that MSI can guide subsequent material isolation technologies such as laser microdissection (LMD) to enable a more in-depth molecular characterization of MSI-highlighted tissue regions. However, with MSI now reaching spatial resolutions at the single-cell scale, there is a need for a precise co-registration between MSI and the LMD. As proof-of-principle, MSI of lipids was performed on a breast cancer tissue followed by a segmentation of the data to detect molecularly distinct segments within its tumor areas. After image processing of the segmentation results, the coordinates of the MSI-detected segments were passed to the LMD system by three co-registration steps. The errors of each co-registration step were quantified and the total error was found to be less than 13 μm. With this link established, MSI data can now accurately guide LMD to excise MSI-defined regions of interest for subsequent extract-based analyses. In our example, the excised tissue material was then subjected to ultrasensitive microproteomics in order to determine predominant molecular mechanisms in each of the MSI-highlighted intratumor segments. This work shows how the strengths of MSI, histology, and extract-based omics can be combined to enable a more comprehensive molecular characterization of in situ biological processes.
Keyphrases
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- single cell
- deep learning
- liquid chromatography
- oxidative stress
- gold nanoparticles
- rna seq
- high throughput
- patient safety
- optical coherence tomography
- fatty acid
- capillary electrophoresis
- high performance liquid chromatography
- data analysis
- young adults
- label free
- breast cancer risk