Abstract

Absolute quantification of biological samples provides precise numerical expression levels, enhancing accuracy, and performance for rare templates. Current methodologies, however, face challenges-flow cytometers are costly and complex, whereas fluorescence imaging, relying on software or manual counting, is time-consuming and error-prone. It is presented that Deep-qGFP, a deep learning-aided pipeline for the automated detection and classification of green fluorescent protein (GFP) labeled microreactors, enables real-time absolute quantification. This approach achieves an accuracy of 96.23% and accurately measures the sizes and occupancy status of microreactors using standard laboratory fluorescence microscopes, providing precise template concentrations. Deep-qGFP demonstrates remarkable speed, quantifying over 2000 microreactors across ten images in just 2.5seconds, with a dynamic range of 56.52-1569.43copiesµL-1 . The method demonstrates impressive generalization capabilities, successfully applied to various GFP-labeling scenarios, including droplet-based, microwell-based, and agarose-based applications. Notably, Deep-qGFP is the first all-in-one image analysis algorithm successfully implemented in droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (PCR), microwell digital PCR, droplet single-cell sequencing, agarose digital PCR, and bacterial quantification, without requiring transfer learning, modifications, or retraining. This makes Deep-qGFP readily applicable in biomedical laboratories and holds potential for broader clinical applications.

Full Text
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