Super Resolution Network Analysis Defines the Molecular Architecture of Caveolae and Caveolin-1 Scaffolds.
Ismail M KhaterFanrui MengTimothy H WongIvan Robert NabiGhassan HamarnehPublished in: Scientific reports (2018)
Quantitative approaches to analyze the large data sets generated by single molecule localization super-resolution microscopy (SMLM) are limited. We developed a computational pipeline and applied it to analyzing 3D point clouds of SMLM localizations (event lists) of the caveolar coat protein, caveolin-1 (Cav1), in prostate cancer cells differentially expressing CAVIN1 (also known as PTRF), that is also required for caveolae formation. High degree (strongly-interacting) points were removed by an iterative blink merging algorithm and Cav1 network properties were compared with randomly generated networks to retain a sub-network of geometric structures (or blobs). Machine-learning based classification extracted 28 quantitative features describing the size, shape, topology and network characteristics of ∼80,000 blobs. Unsupervised clustering identified small S1A scaffolds corresponding to SDS-resistant Cav1 oligomers, as yet undescribed larger hemi-spherical S2 scaffolds and, only in CAVIN1-expressing cells, spherical, hollow caveolae. Multi-threshold modularity analysis suggests that S1A scaffolds interact to form larger scaffolds and that S1A dimers group together, in the presence of CAVIN1, to form the caveolae coat.
Keyphrases
- single molecule
- machine learning
- tissue engineering
- network analysis
- high resolution
- deep learning
- big data
- artificial intelligence
- living cells
- induced apoptosis
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high throughput
- rna seq
- magnetic resonance
- computed tomography
- mass spectrometry
- oxidative stress
- molecularly imprinted
- amino acid
- single cell
- high speed
- image quality
- label free
- dual energy