scholarly journals Mars, a molecule archive suite for reproducible analysis and reporting of single molecule properties from bioimages

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nadia M Huisjes ◽  
Thomas M Retzer ◽  
Matthias J Scherr ◽  
Rohit Agarwal ◽  
Barbara Safaric ◽  
...  

The rapid development of new imaging approaches is generating larger and more complex datasets revealing the time evolution of individual cells and biomolecules. Single-molecule techniques, in particular, provide access to rare intermediates in complex, multistage molecular pathways, but few standards exist for processing these information-rich datasets, posing challenges for wider dissemination. Here, we present Mars, an open-source platform for storage and processing of image-derived properties of biomolecules. Mars provides Fiji/ImageJ2 commands written in Java for common single-molecule analysis tasks using a Molecule Archive architecture that is easily adapted to complex, multistep analysis workflows. Three diverse workflows involving molecule tracking, multichannel fluorescence imaging, and force spectroscopy, demonstrate the range of analysis applications. A comprehensive graphical user interface written in JavaFX enhances biomolecule feature exploration by providing charting, tagging, region highlighting, scriptable dashboards, and interactive image views. The interoperability of ImageJ2 ensures Molecule Archives can easily be opened in multiple environments, including those written in Python using PyImageJ, for interactive scripting and visualization. Mars provides a flexible solution for reproducible analysis of image-derived properties facilitating the discovery and quantitative classification of new biological phenomena with an open data format accessible to everyone.

2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonino Ingargiola ◽  
Ted Laurence ◽  
Robert Boutelle ◽  
Shimon Weiss ◽  
Xavier Michalet

Author(s):  
Anjan Panneer Selvam ◽  
Shalini Prasad

A nanowell sensor for single molecular proteomic analysis of lung cancer has been designed. The nanowell sensor is an electrochemical immunoassay and comprises of a heterogenous nanoporous arrays integrated on to a gold microelectronic platform. The sensor operates on the principle of electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS). Our approach to classification of lung cancer is based on screening for levels of expression of specific proteomic biomarkers associated with lung cancer stem cells. Proteomic activity for two lung cancer cell lines for two specific markers (ALDH1A1 and ALDH1A3) was quantified. Test samples prepared by synthetically spiking human pooled serum were tested and quantified for cancer stem cell marker activity. The lowest proteomic activity measured with (a) ALDH1A3 was 0.01 ng/mL and (b) ALDH1A1 was 1 ng/mL correlating to the detection of unit stem cell count.


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