NCLGOct 24, 2022

A Neural Network Based Automated IFT-20 Sensory Neuron Classifier for Caenorhabditis elegans

arXiv:2210.14961v1h-index: 1
Originality Incremental advance
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This addresses the challenge of neuron identification in neuroscience for researchers using C. elegans, offering an alternative to genetically modified methods.

The study tackled the problem of identifying sensory neurons in C. elegans using only single-color fluorescent images, achieving 91.61% accuracy with a neural network classifier.

Determining neuronal identity in imaging data is an essential task in neuroscience, facilitating the comparison of neural activity across organisms. Cross-organism comparison, in turn, enables a wide variety of research including whole-brain analysis of functional networks and linking the activity of specific neurons to behavior or environmental stimuli. The recent development of three-dimensional, pan-neuronal imaging with single-cell resolution within Caenorhabditis elegans has brought neuron identification, tracking, and activity monitoring all within reach. The nematode C. elegans is often used as a model organism to study neuronal activity due to factors such as its transparency and well-understood nervous system. The principal barrier to high-accuracy neuron identification is that in adult C. elegans, the position of neuronal cell bodies is not stereotyped. Existing approaches to address this issue use genetically encoded markers as an additional identifying feature. For example, the NeuroPAL strain uses multicolored fluorescent reporters. However, this approach has limited use due to the negative effects of excessive genetic modification. In this study, I propose an alternative neuronal identification technique using only single-color fluorescent images. I designed a novel neural network based classifier that automatically labels sensory neurons using an iterative, landmark-based neuron identification process inspired by the manual annotation procedures that humans employ. This design labels sensory neurons in C. elegans with 91.61% accuracy.

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