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1.
Pac Symp Biocomput ; 29: 477-491, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38160301

RESUMO

The advent of spatial transcriptomics technologies has heralded a renaissance in research to advance our understanding of the spatial cellular and transcriptional heterogeneity within tissues. Spatial transcriptomics allows investigation of the interplay between cells, molecular pathways, and the surrounding tissue architecture and can help elucidate developmental trajectories, disease pathogenesis, and various niches in the tumor microenvironment. Photoaging is the histological and molecular skin damage resulting from chronic/acute sun exposure and is a major risk factor for skin cancer. Spatial transcriptomics technologies hold promise for improving the reliability of evaluating photoaging and developing new therapeutics. Challenges to current methods include limited focus on dermal elastosis variations and reliance on self-reported measures, which can introduce subjectivity and inconsistency. Spatial transcriptomics offers an opportunity to assess photoaging objectively and reproducibly in studies of carcinogenesis and discern the effectiveness of therapies that intervene in photoaging and preventing cancer. Evaluation of distinct histological architectures using highly-multiplexed spatial technologies can identify specific cell lineages that have been understudied due to their location beyond the depth of UV penetration. However, the cost and interpatient variability using state-of-the-art assays such as the 10x Genomics Spatial Transcriptomics assays limits the scope and scale of large-scale molecular epidemiologic studies. Here, we investigate the inference of spatial transcriptomics information from routine hematoxylin and eosin-stained (H&E) tissue slides. We employed the Visium CytAssist spatial transcriptomics assay to analyze over 18,000 genes at a 50-micron resolution for four patients from a cohort of 261 skin specimens collected adjacent to surgical resection sites for basal cell and squamous cell keratinocyte tumors. The spatial transcriptomics data was co-registered with 40x resolution whole slide imaging (WSI) information. We developed machine learning models that achieved a macro-averaged median AUC and F1 score of 0.80 and 0.61 and Spearman coefficient of 0.60 in inferring transcriptomic profiles across the slides, and accurately captured biological pathways across various tissue architectures.


Assuntos
Envelhecimento da Pele , Humanos , Envelhecimento da Pele/genética , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Biologia Computacional , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Amarelo de Eosina-(YS) , Transcriptoma
2.
Pac Symp Biocomput ; 29: 464-476, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38160300

RESUMO

Graph-based deep learning has shown great promise in cancer histopathology image analysis by contextualizing complex morphology and structure across whole slide images to make high quality downstream outcome predictions (ex: prognostication). These methods rely on informative representations (i.e., embeddings) of image patches comprising larger slides, which are used as node attributes in slide graphs. Spatial omics data, including spatial transcriptomics, is a novel paradigm offering a wealth of detailed information. Pairing this data with corresponding histological imaging localized at 50-micron resolution, may facilitate the development of algorithms which better appreciate the morphological and molecular underpinnings of carcinogenesis. Here, we explore the utility of leveraging spatial transcriptomics data with a contrastive crossmodal pretraining mechanism to generate deep learning models that can extract molecular and histological information for graph-based learning tasks. Performance on cancer staging, lymph node metastasis prediction, survival prediction, and tissue clustering analyses indicate that the proposed methods bring improvement to graph based deep learning models for histopathological slides compared to leveraging histological information from existing schemes, demonstrating the promise of mining spatial omics data to enhance deep learning for pathology workflows.


Assuntos
Aprendizado Profundo , Neoplasias , Humanos , Biologia Computacional , Neoplasias/genética , Algoritmos , Análise por Conglomerados
3.
medRxiv ; 2023 Oct 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37873186

RESUMO

Background: Spatial transcriptomics involves studying the spatial organization of gene expression within tissues, offering insights into the molecular diversity of tumors. While spatial gene expression is commonly amalgamated from 1-10 cells across 50-micron spots, recent methods have demonstrated the capability to disaggregate this information at subspot resolution by leveraging both expression and histological patterns. However, elucidating such information from histology alone presents a significant challenge but if solved can better permit spatial molecular analysis at cellular resolution for instances where Visium data is not available, reducing study costs. This study explores integrating single-cell histological and transcriptomic data to infer spatial mRNA expression patterns in whole slide images collected from a cohort of stage pT3 colorectal cancer patients. A cell graph neural network algorithm was developed to align histological information extracted from detected cells with single cell RNA patterns through optimal transport methods, facilitating the analysis of cellular groupings and gene relationships. This approach leveraged spot-level expression as an intermediary to co-map histological and transcriptomic information at the single-cell level. Results: Our study demonstrated that single-cell transcriptional heterogeneity within a spot could be predicted from histological markers extracted from cells detected within a spot. Furthermore, our model exhibited proficiency in delineating overarching gene expression patterns across whole-slide images. This approach compared favorably to traditional patch-based computer vision methods as well as other methods which did not incorporate single cell expression during the model fitting procedures. Topological nuances of single-cell expression within a Visium spot were preserved using the developed methodology. Conclusion: This innovative approach augments the resolution of spatial molecular assays utilizing histology as a sole input through synergistic co-mapping of histological and transcriptomic datasets at the single-cell level, anchored by spatial transcriptomics. While initial results are promising, they warrant rigorous validation. This includes collaborating with pathologists for precise spatial identification of distinct cell types and utilizing sophisticated assays, such as Xenium, to attain deeper subcellular insights.

4.
medRxiv ; 2023 Oct 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37873287

RESUMO

The application of deep learning methods to spatial transcriptomics has shown promise in unraveling the complex relationships between gene expression patterns and tissue architecture as they pertain to various pathological conditions. Deep learning methods that can infer gene expression patterns directly from tissue histomorphology can expand the capability to discern spatial molecular markers within tissue slides. However, current methods utilizing these techniques are plagued by substantial variability in tissue preparation and characteristics, which can hinder the broader adoption of these tools. Furthermore, training deep learning models using spatial transcriptomics on small study cohorts remains a costly endeavor. Necessitating novel tissue preparation processes enhance assay reliability, resolution, and scalability. This study investigated the impact of an enhanced specimen processing workflow for facilitating a deep learning-based spatial transcriptomics assessment. The enhanced workflow leveraged the flexibility of the Visium CytAssist assay to permit automated H&E staining (e.g., Leica Bond) of tissue slides, whole-slide imaging at 40x-resolution, and multiplexing of tissue sections from multiple patients within individual capture areas for spatial transcriptomics profiling. Using a cohort of thirteen pT3 stage colorectal cancer (CRC) patients, we compared the efficacy of deep learning models trained on slide prepared using an enhanced workflow as compared to the traditional workflow which leverages manual tissue staining and standard imaging of tissue slides. Leveraging Inceptionv3 neural networks, we aimed to predict gene expression patterns across matched serial tissue sections, each stemming from a distinct workflow but aligned based on persistent histological structures. Findings indicate that the enhanced workflow considerably outperformed the traditional spatial transcriptomics workflow. Gene expression profiles predicted from enhanced tissue slides also yielded expression patterns more topologically consistent with the ground truth. This led to enhanced statistical precision in pinpointing biomarkers associated with distinct spatial structures. These insights can potentially elevate diagnostic and prognostic biomarker detection by broadening the range of spatial molecular markers linked to metastasis and recurrence. Future endeavors will further explore these findings to enrich our comprehension of various diseases and uncover molecular pathways with greater nuance. Combining deep learning with spatial transcriptomics provides a compelling avenue to enrich our understanding of tumor biology and improve clinical outcomes. For results of the highest fidelity, however, effective specimen processing is crucial, and fostering collaboration between histotechnicians, pathologists, and genomics specialists is essential to herald this new era in spatial transcriptomics-driven cancer research.

5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jul 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37577612

RESUMO

The advent of spatial transcriptomics technologies has heralded a renaissance in research to advance our understanding of the spatial cellular and transcriptional heterogeneity within tissues. Spatial transcriptomics allows investigation of the interplay between cells, molecular pathways and the surrounding tissue architecture and can help elucidate developmental trajectories, disease pathogenesis, and various niches in the tumor microenvironment. Photoaging is the histological and molecular skin damage resulting from chronic/acute sun exposure and is a major risk factor for skin cancer. Spatial transcriptomics technologies hold promise for improving the reliability of evaluating photoaging and developing new therapeutics. Current challenges, including limited focus on dermal elastosis variations and reliance on self-reported measures, can introduce subjectivity and inconsistency. Spatial transcriptomics offer an opportunity to assess photoaging objectively and reproducibly in studies of carcinogenesis and discern the effectiveness of therapies that intervene on photoaging and prevent cancer. Evaluation of distinct histological architectures using highly-multiplexed spatial technologies can identify specific cell lineages that have been understudied due to their location beyond the depth of UV penetration. However, the cost and inter-patient variability using state-of-the-art assays such as the 10x Genomics Spatial Transcriptomics assays limits the scope and scale of large-scale molecular epidemiologic studies. Here, we investigate the inference of spatial transcriptomics information from routine hematoxylin and eosin-stained (H&E) tissue slides. We employed the Visium CytAssist spatial transcriptomics assay to analyze over 18,000 genes at a 50-micron resolution for four patients from a cohort of 261 skin specimens collected adjacent to surgical resection sites for basal and squamous keratinocyte tumors. The spatial transcriptomics data was co-registered with 40x resolution whole slide imaging (WSI) information. We developed machine learning models that achieved a macro-averaged median AUC and F1 score of 0.80 and 0.61 and Spearman coefficient of 0.60 in inferring transcriptomic profiles across the slides, and accurately captured biological pathways across various tissue architectures.

6.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jul 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37577686

RESUMO

Graph-based deep learning has shown great promise in cancer histopathology image analysis by contextualizing complex morphology and structure across whole slide images to make high quality downstream outcome predictions (ex: prognostication). These methods rely on informative representations (i.e., embeddings) of image patches comprising larger slides, which are used as node attributes in slide graphs. Spatial omics data, including spatial transcriptomics, is a novel paradigm offering a wealth of detailed information. Pairing this data with corresponding histological imaging localized at 50-micron resolution, may facilitate the development of algorithms which better appreciate the morphological and molecular underpinnings of carcinogenesis. Here, we explore the utility of leveraging spatial transcriptomics data with a contrastive crossmodal pretraining mechanism to generate deep learning models that can extract molecular and histological information for graph-based learning tasks. Performance on cancer staging, lymph node metastasis prediction, survival prediction, and tissue clustering analyses indicate that the proposed methods bring improvement to graph based deep learning models for histopathological slides compared to leveraging histological information from existing schemes, demonstrating the promise of mining spatial omics data to enhance deep learning for pathology workflows.

7.
J Pathol Inform ; 14: 100308, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37114077

RESUMO

Over 150 000 Americans are diagnosed with colorectal cancer (CRC) every year, and annually over 50 000 individuals will die from CRC, necessitating improvements in screening, prognostication, disease management, and therapeutic options. Tumor metastasis is the primary factor related to the risk of recurrence and mortality. Yet, screening for nodal and distant metastasis is costly, and invasive and incomplete resection may hamper adequate assessment. Signatures of the tumor-immune microenvironment (TIME) at the primary site can provide valuable insights into the aggressiveness of the tumor and the effectiveness of various treatment options. Spatially resolved transcriptomics technologies offer an unprecedented characterization of TIME through high multiplexing, yet their scope is constrained by cost. Meanwhile, it has long been suspected that histological, cytological, and macroarchitectural tissue characteristics correlate well with molecular information (e.g., gene expression). Thus, a method for predicting transcriptomics data through inference of RNA patterns from whole slide images (WSI) is a key step in studying metastasis at scale. In this work, we collected tissue from 4 stage-III (pT3) matched colorectal cancer patients for spatial transcriptomics profiling. The Visium spatial transcriptomics (ST) assay was used to measure transcript abundance for 17 943 genes at up to 5000 55-micron (i.e., 1-10 cells) spots per patient sampled in a honeycomb pattern, co-registered with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) stained WSI. The Visium ST assay can measure expression at these spots through tissue permeabilization of mRNAs, which are captured through spatially (i.e., x-y positional coordinates) barcoded, gene specific oligo probes. WSI subimages were extracted around each co-registered Visium spot and were used to predict the expression at these spots using machine learning models. We prototyped and compared several convolutional, transformer, and graph convolutional neural networks to predict spatial RNA patterns at the Visium spots under the hypothesis that the transformer- and graph-based approaches better capture relevant spatial tissue architecture. We further analyzed the model's ability to recapitulate spatial autocorrelation statistics using SPARK and SpatialDE. Overall, the results indicate that the transformer- and graph-based approaches were unable to outperform the convolutional neural network architecture, though they exhibited optimal performance for relevant disease-associated genes. Initial findings suggest that different neural networks that operate on different scales are relevant for capturing distinct disease pathways (e.g., epithelial to mesenchymal transition). We add further evidence that deep learning models can accurately predict gene expression in whole slide images and comment on understudied factors which may increase its external applicability (e.g., tissue context). Our preliminary work will motivate further investigation of inference for molecular patterns from whole slide images as metastasis predictors and in other applications.

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