Low concentration cell painting images enable the identification of highly potent compounds

Image-based models that use features extracted from cell microscopy images can estimate the activity of small molecules in various biological assays. Typically, models are trained on images stained by an optimized protocol (e.g. Cell Painting) after exposure to a fairly high small molecule concentra...

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Published inScientific reports Vol. 14; no. 1; pp. 24403 - 12
Main Authors Ha, Son V., Jaensch, Steffen, Freitas, Lorena G. A., Herman, Dorota, Czodrowski, Paul, Ceulemans, Hugo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Nature Publishing Group UK 17.10.2024
Nature Publishing Group
Nature Portfolio
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Summary:Image-based models that use features extracted from cell microscopy images can estimate the activity of small molecules in various biological assays. Typically, models are trained on images stained by an optimized protocol (e.g. Cell Painting) after exposure to a fairly high small molecule concentration (referred to as ’image concentration’) of 10 μ M or higher. Low concentration images (e.g. 0.16 μM, 0.8 μM, 4 μM) tend to yield models with worse performance. In this work, we nevertheless report a practical use for low image concentration data. We propose the combination of well-performing models trained at higher image concentrations, with lower image concentration for inference to identify more potent compounds. We show that this approach improves on the conventional method (directly training a high-potency model) in 65 % of assays investigated in terms of AUC-ROC, and 75 % of assays in terms of RIPtoP-corrected AUC-PR.
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ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-024-75401-5