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Analysis of Movement of Cellular Oscillators in the Pre-somitic Mesoderm of the Zebrafish EmbryoRajasekaran, Bhavna 10 April 2013 (has links) (PDF)
During vertebrate embryo development, the body axis is subdivided into repeated structures, called somites. Somites bud off from an un-segmented tissue called the pre-somitic mesoderm (PSM) in a sequential and periodic manner, tightly controlled by an in built molecular clock, called the "segmentation clock". According to current understanding, the clock is comprised of: (i) an autonomous cellular oscillator consisting of an intracellular negative feedback loop of Her genes within the PSM cells, (ii) Delta-ligand and Notch-receptor coupling that facilitates synchronization of oscillators among the PSM cells, (iii) Tissue level waves of gene expression that emerge in the posterior PSM and move coherently towards anterior, leading to global arrest of oscillations in the form of somites. However, the movement of cellular oscillators within the PSM before the formation of somitic furrows, a prominent feature of the tissue as observed through this work has not been experimentally considered as a constituent of the segmentation clock so far.
Our work aims to incorporate movement of cellular oscillators in the framework of the segmentation clock. It is well known from theoretical studies that the characteristics of relative motion of oscillators affect their synchronization properties and the patterns of oscillations they form. Particularly, theoretical studies by Uriu et al., PNAS (2010) suggest that cell movements promotes synchronization of genetic oscillations. Here, we established experimental techniques and image analysis tools to attain quantitative insight on (i) diffusion co-efficient of cellular oscillators, (ii) dynamics of a population of oscillators, within the PSM aiming towards concomitant understanding of the relationship between movement and synchronization of cellular oscillators.
In order to quantitatively relate cellular oscillators and their motion within the PSM, I established imaging techniques that enabled visualization of fluorescenctly labeled nuclei as readouts of cell positions in live embryo, and developed dedicated segmentation algorithm and implemented tracking protocol to obtain nuclei positions over time in 3D space. Furthermore, I provide benchmarking techniques in the form of artificial data that validate segmentation algorithm efficacy and, for the first time proposed the use of transgenic embryo chimeras to validate segmentation algorithm performance within the context of in vivo live imaging of embryonic tissues. Preliminary analysis of our data suggests that there is relatively high cell mixing in the posterior PSM, within the same spatial zone where synchronous oscillations emerge at maximum speed. Also, there are indications of gradient of cell mixing along the anterior-posterior axis of the embryo. By sampling single cell tracks with the help of nuclei markers, we have also been able to follow in vivo protein oscillations at single cell resolution that would allow quantitative characterization of coherence among a population of cellular oscillators over time. Our image analysis work flow allows testing of mutant embryos and perturbation of synchrony dynamics to understand the cause-effect relationship between movement and synchronization properties at cellular resolution. Essentially, through this work, we hope to bridge the time scales of events and cellular level dynamics that leads to highly coordinated tissue level patterns and thereby further our understanding of the segmentation clock mechanism.
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Graphe de surface orientée : un modèle opérationnel de segmentation d'image 3DBaldacci, Fabien 09 December 2009 (has links)
Dans ce travail nous nous intéressons à la segmentation d’image 3D. Le but est de définir un cadre permettant, étant donnée une problématique de segmentation, de développer rapidement un algorithme apportant une solution à cette problématique. Afin de ne pas être restreint à un sous ensemble des types de problématique de segmentation, ce cadre doit permettre de mettre en oeuvre efficacement les différentes méthodes et les différents critères de segmentation existants, dans le but de les combiner pour définir les nouveaux algorithmes. Ce cadre doit reposer sur un modèle de structuration d’image qui représente la topologie et la géométrie d’une partition et permet d’en extraire efficacement les informations requises. Dans ce document, les différentes méthodes de segmentation existantes sont présentées afin de définir un ensemble d’opération nécessaire à leur implémentation. Une présentation des modèles existants est faite pour en déterminer avantages et inconvénients, puis le nouveau modèle est ensuite défini. Sa mise en oeuvre complète est détaillée ainsi qu’une analyse de sa complexité en temps et en mémoire pour l’ensemble des opérations précédemment définies. Des exemples d’utilisation du modèle sur des cas concrets sont ensuite décrits, ainsi que les possibilités d’extension du modèle et d’implémentation sur architecture parallèle. / In this work we focus on 3D image segmentation. The aim consists in defining a framework which, given a segmentation problem, allows to design efficiently an algorithm solving this problem. Since this framework has to be unspecific according to the kind of segmentation problem, it has to allow an efficient implementation of most segmentation techniques and criteria, in order to combine them to define new algorithms. This framework has to rely on a structuring model both representing the topology and the geometry of the partition of an image, in order to efficiently extract required information. In this document, different segmentation techniques are presented in order to define a set of primitives required for their implementation. Existing models are presented with their advantages and drawbacks, then the new structuring model is defined. Its whole implementation including details of its memory consumption and time complexity for each primitives of the previously defined set of requirements is given. Some examples of use with real image analysis problems are described, with also possible extensions of the model and its implementation on parallel architecture.
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Analysis of Movement of Cellular Oscillators in the Pre-somitic Mesoderm of the Zebrafish EmbryoRajasekaran, Bhavna 13 February 2013 (has links)
During vertebrate embryo development, the body axis is subdivided into repeated structures, called somites. Somites bud off from an un-segmented tissue called the pre-somitic mesoderm (PSM) in a sequential and periodic manner, tightly controlled by an in built molecular clock, called the "segmentation clock". According to current understanding, the clock is comprised of: (i) an autonomous cellular oscillator consisting of an intracellular negative feedback loop of Her genes within the PSM cells, (ii) Delta-ligand and Notch-receptor coupling that facilitates synchronization of oscillators among the PSM cells, (iii) Tissue level waves of gene expression that emerge in the posterior PSM and move coherently towards anterior, leading to global arrest of oscillations in the form of somites. However, the movement of cellular oscillators within the PSM before the formation of somitic furrows, a prominent feature of the tissue as observed through this work has not been experimentally considered as a constituent of the segmentation clock so far.
Our work aims to incorporate movement of cellular oscillators in the framework of the segmentation clock. It is well known from theoretical studies that the characteristics of relative motion of oscillators affect their synchronization properties and the patterns of oscillations they form. Particularly, theoretical studies by Uriu et al., PNAS (2010) suggest that cell movements promotes synchronization of genetic oscillations. Here, we established experimental techniques and image analysis tools to attain quantitative insight on (i) diffusion co-efficient of cellular oscillators, (ii) dynamics of a population of oscillators, within the PSM aiming towards concomitant understanding of the relationship between movement and synchronization of cellular oscillators.
In order to quantitatively relate cellular oscillators and their motion within the PSM, I established imaging techniques that enabled visualization of fluorescenctly labeled nuclei as readouts of cell positions in live embryo, and developed dedicated segmentation algorithm and implemented tracking protocol to obtain nuclei positions over time in 3D space. Furthermore, I provide benchmarking techniques in the form of artificial data that validate segmentation algorithm efficacy and, for the first time proposed the use of transgenic embryo chimeras to validate segmentation algorithm performance within the context of in vivo live imaging of embryonic tissues. Preliminary analysis of our data suggests that there is relatively high cell mixing in the posterior PSM, within the same spatial zone where synchronous oscillations emerge at maximum speed. Also, there are indications of gradient of cell mixing along the anterior-posterior axis of the embryo. By sampling single cell tracks with the help of nuclei markers, we have also been able to follow in vivo protein oscillations at single cell resolution that would allow quantitative characterization of coherence among a population of cellular oscillators over time. Our image analysis work flow allows testing of mutant embryos and perturbation of synchrony dynamics to understand the cause-effect relationship between movement and synchronization properties at cellular resolution. Essentially, through this work, we hope to bridge the time scales of events and cellular level dynamics that leads to highly coordinated tissue level patterns and thereby further our understanding of the segmentation clock mechanism.
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Semi-Automated Segmentation of 3D Medical Ultrasound ImagesQuartararo, John David 05 February 2009 (has links)
A level set-based segmentation procedure has been implemented to identify target object boundaries from 3D medical ultrasound images. Several test images (simulated, scanned phantoms, clinical) were subjected to various preprocessing methods and segmented. Two metrics of segmentation accuracy were used to compare the segmentation results to ground truth models and determine which preprocessing methods resulted in the best segmentations. It was found that by using an anisotropic diffusion filtering method to reduce speckle type noise with a 3D active contour segmentation routine using the level set method resulted in semi-automated segmentation on par with medical doctors hand-outlining the same images.
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PARALLEL 3D IMAGE SEGMENTATION BY GPU-AMENABLE LEVEL SET SOLUTIONHagan, Aaron M. 17 June 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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