设定黄金标准:关于设计和优化高参数流式细胞仪板的评论

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Stephen C. De Rosa, Yolanda D. Mahnke
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Other types of metrics, such as the complexity and similarity indices, have been developed more recently for full spectrum cytometry that are equally effective in streamlining panel design based on theoretical considerations.</p><p>The authors of OMIP-102 [<span>1</span>], published in this issue, showcase a 50-color OMIP, where the thoughtful and methodical selection of marker-fluorescence combinations clearly contribute to the panel's effectiveness in analyzing and visualizing the expression of cellular components. After exploiting all existing tools to aid in this endeavor, they also developed a new metric, the unmixing spreading error, which elucidates how the complexity of the spectral unmixing matrix impacts the rise in noise across all measured cells per fluorochrome, enabling the systematic design of such a high-parameter immunofluorescence panel.</p><p>This exemplifies the ideal approach to panel design and optimization. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

流式细胞仪的技术进步极大地扩展了其功能。这些进步是随着时间的推移逐步实现的,但也有几项关键进步对该技术及其使用方式产生了更为显著的影响。流式细胞仪的一个主要特点是能以高通量和大容量的方式在单细胞水平上描述细胞标记物的表达。可同时测量的细胞标记物数量最初很少,但随着时间的推移几乎呈指数增长。造成这种增长的原因有很多,包括仪器硬件的进步、新型荧光染料的引入,以及分析工具的进步,这些进步不仅实现了高效的数据分析,还让人们对荧光染料/检测器的相互作用有了新的认识,为高维度染色面板的优化设计提供了理论基础。本文发表的 OMIP-102 [1] 代表了流式细胞仪技术的一个里程碑,利用并拓展了所有这些累积的进步。单单展示 "50 色 "染色板就很了不起,此外,正文和在线资料中的设计方法以及对设计过程细致而有条理的描述,为染色板设计提供了一个明确的大纲,其中集成了迄今为止所有的最佳实践。硬件方面的一个关键进步是优化了仪器的光学系统,使相对较弱的荧光信号能够在大型探测器阵列中得到最有效的细分。仪器制造商已开发出自己的方法来实现这一目标,并取得了成功,目前已具备检测多达 28 种荧光染料的单独信号的常规能力,而且这一能力还在不断扩大。有多篇优化多色免疫荧光面板 (OMIP) 出版物成功展示了这种规模的染色面板。光谱光学可能是代表新范例的最重大进展。这是一个出色的概念,回想起来似乎是显而易见的最佳方法。虽然全光谱流式细胞仪在 2004 年首次展示[2, 3],但它需要硬件和软件的进一步发展,才能为广大用户提供常规应用。由于具有适当亮度和光谱特性的天然荧光染料的发现受到限制,幸运的是,定制设计的染料出现了--量子点[4]和有机聚合物[5, 6](以及它们与更传统的染料的串联组合)就是一个例子,这两种染料都源于获得诺贝尔奖的发现。我们这些设计染色面板的人都记得,这些鲜艳染料的引入带来了能力上的突然转变。也许,这些改变流式细胞仪游戏规则的影响没有得到同样的认可,但有几种数据分析和表示的替代方法却能从日益复杂的数据集中提取有意义的见解。双指数缩放[7, 8]的引入现在看来似乎微不足道,只是另一种普遍使用的工具,但这种 "工具 "并不只是提供了一种更美观的数据表示。相反,它对于正确解释结果和辨别影响负空间的人工痕迹非常必要。随着维度的增加,隐藏伪影的可能性也随之增加,面板设计变得更加复杂。纯粹的经验设计不再可行。显然,"溢出扩散 "是需要考虑的重要因素,因此,引入一种衡量标准来衡量溢出扩散,并以溢出扩散矩阵[9]的形式显示出来,成为小组设计不可或缺的工具。本期发表的 OMIP-102 [1]的作者展示了一个 50 色 OMIP,对标记物-荧光组合的深思熟虑和有条不紊的选择显然有助于面板在分析和可视化细胞成分表达方面的有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Setting the gold standard: Commentary on designing and optimizing high-parameter flow cytometry panels

Technological advances in flow cytometry have greatly expanded its capabilities. These have occurred gradually over time, but there have also been several key advances that have more markedly affected the technology and how it is used. A prime feature of flow cytometry is the ability to characterize cell marker expression at the single-cell level as high-throughput and high volume. The number of cell markers that could be measured simultaneously was initially very low but has been increasing almost exponentially over time. There are many reasons for this increase including advances in hardware for the instrumentation, introduction of new types of fluorescent dyes beyond those found in nature, and also advances in analysis tools that not only enable efficient data analysis but have elegantly allowed for new insights into fluorescent dye/detector interactions that provide theoretical bases for optimal staining panel design in high dimensions.

OMIP-102 [1] published here represents a milestone in flow cytometry technology and makes use of and expands upon all of those cumulative advances. Simply the demonstration of a “50-color” staining panel is remarkable, but in addition, the approach to the design and the careful and methodical description of the design process both in the main text and the online material provide a definitive syllabus for staining panel design integrating all of the best practices to date.

Because of the wide breadth of information building upon so many of these major advances, it is worthwhile to break down some of those advances into digestible pieces to highlight the significance of this achievement. One key advance in hardware has been the optimization of the instrument optics to enable the relatively weak fluorescent signal to be subdivided most efficiently across large arrays of detectors. Instrument manufacturers have developed their own methods to achieve this goal and the results have been successful with current routine capabilities to detect separate signals from up to 28 fluorescent dyes, and this is expanding. There are multiple Optimized Multicolor Immunofluorescence Panel (OMIP) publications demonstrating successful staining panels at this scale. Likely the most significant advance representing a new paradigm is spectral optics. This is a brilliant concept that in retrospect seems so obvious as the likely best approach. While full spectrum cytometry was first demonstrated in 2004 [2, 3], it required further hardware and software advances to enable routine implementation by a wide user base.

The potential of exploiting the light spectrum more completely for interrogating fluorescently labeled biological specimens directly called for the development of new fluorescent dyes in order to make high-parameter flow cytometry a reality. As the discovery of natural fluorochromes with the appropriate brightness and spectral characteristics was limiting, luckily, custom-designed dyes became available—examples are the quantum dots [4] and organic polymers [5, 6] (and their tandem combinations with more conventional dyes), both of which stemmed from discoveries that earned Nobel prizes. Those of us designing staining panels can all remember the sudden shift in capabilities brought about by the introduction of these bright dyes.

Perhaps not receiving the same recognition for their game-changing impact on flow cytometry are several alternative approaches to data analysis and representation that have enabled the extraction of meaningful insights from increasingly complex datasets. The introduction of bi-exponential scaling [7, 8] may now seem trivial, just another tool that is universally used, but this “tool” does not simply provide a more aesthetically pleasing data representation. Rather, it is necessary to properly interpret results and discern artifacts affecting the negative space. As dimensionality increased, the potential for hidden artifacts also increased, and panel design became more complicated. Purely empirical design was no longer feasible. It became apparent that “spillover spreading” was important to take into account, and the introduction of a metric to measure this and display in the format of the spillover spreading matrix [9] became an integral tool for panel design. Other types of metrics, such as the complexity and similarity indices, have been developed more recently for full spectrum cytometry that are equally effective in streamlining panel design based on theoretical considerations.

The authors of OMIP-102 [1], published in this issue, showcase a 50-color OMIP, where the thoughtful and methodical selection of marker-fluorescence combinations clearly contribute to the panel's effectiveness in analyzing and visualizing the expression of cellular components. After exploiting all existing tools to aid in this endeavor, they also developed a new metric, the unmixing spreading error, which elucidates how the complexity of the spectral unmixing matrix impacts the rise in noise across all measured cells per fluorochrome, enabling the systematic design of such a high-parameter immunofluorescence panel.

This exemplifies the ideal approach to panel design and optimization. While not everyone may need to create new tools and techniques, when confronted with novel challenges stemming from expanding possibilities that stretch the capabilities of current tools, it is essential to adapt our procedures and embrace innovative thinking.

Stephen C. De Rosa: Conceptualization; writing – original draft. Yolanda D. Mahnke: Conceptualization; writing – original draft.

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
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464
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