Abstract

BackgroundThe stress fibers are prominent organization of actin filaments that perform important functions in cellular processes such as migration, polarization, and traction force generation, and whose collective organization reflects the physiological and mechanical activities of the cells. Easily visualized by fluorescence microscopy, the stress fibers are widely used as qualitative descriptors of cell phenotypes. However, due to the complexity of the stress fibers and the presence of other actin-containing cellular features, images of stress fibers are relatively challenging to quantitatively analyze using previously developed approaches, requiring significant user intervention. This poses a challenge for the automation of their detection, segmentation, and quantitative analysis.ResultHere we describe an open-source software package, SFEX (Stress Fiber Extractor), which is geared for efficient enhancement, segmentation, and analysis of actin stress fibers in adherent tissue culture cells. Our method made use of a carefully chosen image filtering technique to enhance filamentous structures, effectively facilitating the detection and segmentation of stress fibers by binary thresholding. We subdivided the skeletons of stress fiber traces into piecewise-linear fragments, and used a set of geometric criteria to reconstruct the stress fiber networks by pairing appropriate fiber fragments. Our strategy enables the trajectory of a majority of stress fibers within the cells to be comprehensively extracted. We also present a method for quantifying the dimensions of the stress fibers using an image gradient-based approach. We determine the optimal parameter space using sensitivity analysis, and demonstrate the utility of our approach by analyzing actin stress fibers in cells cultured on various micropattern substrates.ConclusionWe present an open-source graphically-interfaced computational tool for the extraction and quantification of stress fibers in adherent cells with minimal user input. This facilitates the automated extraction of actin stress fibers from fluorescence images. We highlight their potential uses by analyzing images of cells with shapes constrained by fibronectin micropatterns. The method we reported here could serve as the first step in the detection and characterization of the spatial properties of actin stress fibers to enable further detailed morphological analysis.

Highlights

  • The stress fibers are prominent organization of actin filaments that perform important functions in cellular processes such as migration, polarization, and traction force generation, and whose collective organization reflects the physiological and mechanical activities of the cells

  • The method we reported here could serve as the first step in the detection and characterization of the spatial properties of actin stress fibers to enable further detailed morphological analysis

  • Using Alexa Fluor 568 phalloidin to label filamentous actin (F-actin), diffraction-limited fluorescence images of stress fiber organization can be obtained by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy (TIRFM) imaging

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Summary

Introduction

The stress fibers are prominent organization of actin filaments that perform important functions in cellular processes such as migration, polarization, and traction force generation, and whose collective organization reflects the physiological and mechanical activities of the cells. Since the stress fibers can be readily visualized both in living or fixed cells, by fluorescence microscopy using Factin targeting fluorophores [31,32,33], the architecture of the stress fiber network has long been recognized as a key phenotypic reporter of cellular physiology [34] Such images may encode valuable information on cellular signaling and mechanobiological states, in many studies the analysis of the stress fiber network architecture were often restricted to qualitative descriptions, in significant part due to the limited availability of appropriate methods for quantitative extraction and analysis of salient features of the stress fiber networks

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