Abstract

BackgroundEnergy proxy traits (EPTs) are a novel approach to high dimensional organismal phenotyping that quantify the spectrum of energy levels within different temporal frequencies associated with mean pixel value fluctuations from video. They offer significant potential in addressing the phenotyping bottleneck in biology and are effective at identifying lethal endpoints and measuring specific functional traits, but the extent to which they might contribute additional understanding of the phenotype remains unknown. Consequently, here we test the biological significance of EPTs and their responses relative to fundamental thermodynamic principles. We achieve this using the entire embryonic development of Radix balthica, a freshwater pond snail, at different temperatures (20, 25 & 30 °C) and comparing responses against predictions from Arrhenius’ equation (Q10 = 2).ResultsWe find that EPTs are thermally sensitive and their spectra of frequency response enable effective high-dimensional treatment clustering throughout organismal development. Temperature-specific deviation in EPTs from thermodynamic predictions were evident and indicative of physiological mitigation, although they differed markedly in their responses from manual measures. The EPT spectrum was effective in capturing aspects of the phenotype predictive of biological outcomes, and suggest that EPTs themselves may reflect levels of energy turnover.ConclusionsWhole-organismal biology is incredibly complex, and this contributes to the challenge of developing universal phenotyping approaches. Here, we demonstrate the biological relevance of a new holistic approach to phenotyping that is not constrained by preconceived notions of biological importance. Furthermore, we find that EPTs are an effective approach to measuring even the most dynamic life history stages.

Highlights

  • Technology-enabled high-dimensional-organismal-phenotyping (HDOP) provides efficient measurement of phenotypic traits traditionally used in biology, and can extend the study of the phenotype via proxy traits—measures with no direct traditionalTills et al BMC Bioinformatics (2021) 22:232 equivalent [1,2,3,4,5]

  • While Energy proxy traits (EPTs) have pixel value fluctuations as their basis, they are a holistic approach to measuring complex biological responses not limited by preconceived notions of the phenotype and the traits used to quantify it

  • We investigated whether: iii) the combined responses of EPTs were thermally specific or a function of the sensitivity of individual traits; and iv) levels of EPT during embryonic development were predictive of developmental outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

Technology-enabled high-dimensional-organismal-phenotyping (HDOP) provides efficient measurement of phenotypic traits traditionally used in biology, and can extend the study of the phenotype via proxy traits—measures with no direct traditionalTills et al BMC Bioinformatics (2021) 22:232 equivalent [1,2,3,4,5]. Unlike many automated methods for measuring the phenotype, EPTs do not require targeting of any particular aspect of an organisms’ morphology, physiology or behaviour (e.g. net movement) Rather, they are temporal frequency spectra, capturing fluctuations in mean pixel values, a simple image summary statistic, arising from any biological source visible in video. Energy proxy traits (EPTs) are a novel approach to high dimensional organismal phenotyping that quantify the spectrum of energy levels within different temporal frequencies associated with mean pixel value fluctuations from video. They offer significant potential in addressing the phenotyping bottleneck in biology and are effective at identifying lethal endpoints and measuring specific functional traits, but the extent to which they might contribute additional understanding of the phenotype remains unknown. The EPT spectrum was effective in capturing aspects of the phenotype predictive of biological outcomes, and suggest that EPTs themselves may reflect levels of energy turnover

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