Alberto Bartesaghi
Department of Electrical Engineering
"3D Segmentation of Cellular Tomograms Obtained Using Electron Microscopy and its
Application to HIV Research"
Thursday October 14th, 12:20-1:10, Lind 409
Abstract
Electron tomography allows determination of the three-dimensional
structures of cells and tissues at resolutions significantly higher
than is possible with optical microscopy. Electron tomograms contain,
in principle, vast amounts of information on the locations and
architectures of large numbers of subcellular assemblies and
organelles. The development of reliable quantitative approaches for
interpretation of features in tomograms, is an important problem, but
is a challenging prospect because of the low signal-to-noise ratios
that are inherent to biological electron microscopic images.
As a first step in this direction, we report methods for the automated statistical analysis of HIV particles and selected cellular compartments in electron tomograms recorded from fixed, plastic-embedded sections derived from HIV-infected human macrophages. Individual features in the tomogram are segmented using a novel, robust algorithm that finds their boundaries as global minimal surfaces in a metric space defined by image features.
Our expectation is that such methods will provide tools for semi-automated detection and statistical evaluation of HIV particles at different stages of assembly in the cells, and present opportunities for correlation with biochemical markers of HIV infection.