Author:
Shen Cheng,Lamba Adiyant,Zhu Meng,Zhang Ray,Zernicka-Goetz Magdalena,Yang Changhuei
Abstract
AbstractPolarization of the mammalian embryo at the right developmental time is critical for its development to term and would be valuable in assessing the potential of human embryos. However, tracking polarization requires invasive fluorescence staining, impermissible in the in vitro fertilization clinic. Here, we report the use of artificial intelligence to detect polarization from unstained time-lapse movies of mouse embryos. We assembled a dataset of bright-field movie frames from 8-cell-stage embryos, side-by-side with corresponding images of fluorescent markers of cell polarization. We then used an ensemble learning model to detect whether any bright-field frame showed an embryo before or after onset of polarization. Our resulting model has an accuracy of 85% for detecting polarization, significantly outperforming human volunteers trained on the same data (61% accuracy). We discovered that our self-learning model focuses upon the angle between cells as one known cue for compaction, which precedes polarization, but it outperforms the use of this cue alone. By compressing three-dimensional time-lapsed image data into two-dimensions, we are able to reduce data to an easily manageable size for deep learning processing. In conclusion, we describe a method for detecting a key developmental feature of embryo development that avoids clinically impermissible fluorescence staining.
Funder
Medical Research Council
Cambridge Vice Chancellor’s Award Fund
Rosen Bioengineering Center Pilot Research Grant Award
Wellcome Trust
Leverhulme Trust
Open Philanthropy/Silicon Valley
Weston Havens Foundations
NIH R01
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
6 articles.
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