Spherical harmonics analysis reveals cell shape-fate relationships in zebrafish lateral line neuromasts

Author:

Hewitt Madeleine N.12,Cruz Iván A.3,Linbo Tor H.2,Raible David W.123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Washington School of Medicine 1 Molecular and Cellular Biology Graduate Program , , Seattle, WA 98195 , USA

2. University of Washington School of Medicine 2 Department of Otolaryngology-HNS , , Seattle, WA 98195 , USA

3. University of Washington School of Medicine 3 Department of Biological Structure , , Seattle, WA 98195 , USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Cell shape is a powerful readout of cell state, fate and function. We describe a custom workflow to perform semi-automated, 3D cell and nucleus segmentation, and spherical harmonics and principal components analysis to distill cell and nuclear shape variation into discrete biologically meaningful parameters. We apply these methods to analyze shape in the neuromast cells of the zebrafish lateral line system, finding that shapes vary with cell location and identity. The distinction between hair cells and support cells accounted for much of the variation, which allowed us to train classifiers to predict cell identity from shape features. Using transgenic markers for support cell subpopulations, we found that subtypes had different shapes from each other. To investigate how loss of a neuromast cell type altered cell shape distributions, we examined atoh1a mutants that lack hair cells. We found that mutant neuromasts lacked the cell shape phenotype associated with hair cells, but did not exhibit a mutant-specific cell shape. Our results demonstrate the utility of using 3D cell shape features to characterize, compare and classify cells in a living developing organism.

Funder

Hearing Health Foundation

Hamilton and Mildred Kellogg Trust

Whitcraft Family Gift

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

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