Semi-automated computational assessment of cancer organoid viability using rapid live-cell microscopy

Author:

Buehler Joseph D.ORCID,Bird Cylaina E.ORCID,Savani Milan R.ORCID,Gattie Lauren C.,Hicks William H.ORCID,Levitt Michael M.,Shami Mohamad ElORCID,Hatanpaa Kimmo J.ORCID,Richardson Timothy E.,McBrayer Samuel K.ORCID,Abdullah Kalil G.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractThe creation of patient-derived cancer organoids represents a key advance in preclinical modeling and has recently been applied to a variety of human solid tumor types. However, conventional methods used to assess cellular viability in tissue specimens are poorly suited for the evaluation of cancer organoids because they are time-intensive and involve tissue destruction. To address this issue, we established a suite of 3-dimensional patient-derived glioma organoids, treated them with chemoradiotherapy, stained organoids with non-toxic cell dyes, and imaged them using a rapid laser scanning confocal microscopy method termed “Apex Imaging”. We then developed and tested a fragmentation algorithm to quantify heterogeneity in the topography of the organoids as a potential surrogate marker of viability. This algorithm, SSDquant, provides a 3-dimensional visual representation of the organoid surface and a numerical measurement of the sum-squared distance (SSD) from the derived mass center of the organoid. We tested whether SSD scores correlate with traditional immunohistochemistry-derived cell viability markers (cellularity and cleaved caspase 3 expression) and observed statistically significant associations between them using linear regression analysis. Our work describes a quantitative, non-invasive approach for the serial measurement of patient-derived cancer organoid viability, thus opening new avenues for the application of these models to studies of cancer biology and therapy.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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