Aging
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Research Paper|Volume 4, Issue 2|pp 119—132

Automated image analysis of nuclear shape: What can we learn from a prematurely aged cell?

Meghan K. Driscoll1, Jason L. Albanese2, Zheng-Mei Xiong2, Mitch Mailman1, Wolfgang Losert1, Kan Cao2
  • 1Department of Physics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
  • 2Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742, USA
Received: January 12, 2012Accepted: February 15, 2012Published: February 16, 2012

Abstract

The premature aging disorder, Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS), is caused by mutant lamin A, which affects the nuclear scaffolding. The phenotypic hallmark of HGPS is nuclear blebbing. Interestingly, similar nuclear blebbing has also been observed in aged cells from healthy individuals. Recent work has shown that treatment with rapamycin, an inhibitor of the mTOR pathway, reduced nuclear blebbing in HGPS fibroblasts. However, the extent of blebbing varies considerably within each cell population, which makes manual blind counting challenging and subjective. Here, we show a novel, automated and high throughput nuclear shape analysis that quantitatively measures curvature, area, perimeter, eccentricity and additional metrics of nuclear morphology for large populations of cells. We examined HGPS fibroblast cells treated with rapamycin and RAD001 (an analog to rapamycin). Our analysis shows that treatment with RAD001 and rapamycin reduces nuclear blebbing, consistent with blind counting controls. In addition, we find that rapamycin treatment reduces the area of the nucleus, but leaves the eccentricity unchanged. Our nuclear shape analysis provides an unbiased, multidimensional “fingerprint” for a population of cells, which can be used to quantify treatment efficacy and analyze cellular aging.