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Capturing cell heterogeneity in representations of cell populations for image-based profiling using contrastive learning

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  • Robert van Dijk
  • John Arevalo
  • Mehrtash Babadi
  • Anne E Carpenter
  • Shantanu Singh

Abstract

Image-based cell profiling is a powerful tool that compares perturbed cell populations by measuring thousands of single-cell features and summarizing them into profiles. Typically a sample is represented by averaging across cells, but this fails to capture the heterogeneity within cell populations. We introduce CytoSummaryNet: a Deep Sets-based approach that improves mechanism of action prediction by 30–68% in mean average precision compared to average profiling on a public dataset. CytoSummaryNet uses self-supervised contrastive learning in a multiple-instance learning framework, providing an easier-to-apply method for aggregating single-cell feature data than previously published strategies. Interpretability analysis suggests that the model achieves this improvement by downweighting small mitotic cells or those with debris and prioritizing large uncrowded cells. The approach requires only perturbation labels for training, which are readily available in all cell profiling datasets. CytoSummaryNet offers a straightforward post-processing step for single-cell profiles that can significantly boost retrieval performance on image-based profiling datasets.Author summary: Image-based cell profiling experiments measure thousands of features in millions of cells in microscopy images. Measuring cell response to various treatments in this way has proven powerful for many applications in biological research and drug discovery. However, each cell population responding to a treatment is usually population-averaged, losing information about the diversity of cells within each sample.

Suggested Citation

  • Robert van Dijk & John Arevalo & Mehrtash Babadi & Anne E Carpenter & Shantanu Singh, 2024. "Capturing cell heterogeneity in representations of cell populations for image-based profiling using contrastive learning," PLOS Computational Biology, Public Library of Science, vol. 20(11), pages 1-23, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pcbi00:1012547
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1012547
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