Wang, Yinxue2022-11-252022-11-252021-06-02vt_gsexam:31389http://hdl.handle.net/10919/112695Advances in time-lapse 3D in vivo fluorescence microscopic imaging techniques enables the observation and investigation into the migration of Oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) and its role in the central nervous system. However, current practice of image-based OPC motility analysis heavily relies on manual labeling and tracking on 2D max projection of the 3D data, which suffers from massive human labor, subjective biases, weak reproducibility and especially information loss and distortion. Besides, due to the lack of OPC specific genetically encoded indicator, OPCs can only be identified from other oligodendrocyte lineage cells by their observed motion patterns. Automated analytical tools are needed for the identification and tracking of OPCs. In this dissertation work, we proposed an analytical framework, MicTracker (Migrating Cell Tracker), for the integrated task of identifying, segmenting and tracking migrating cells (OPCs) from in vivo time-lapse fluorescence imaging data of high-density cell clusters composed of cells with different modes of motions. As a component of the framework, we presented a novel strategy for cell segmentation with global temporal consistency enforced, tackling the challenges caused by highly clustered cell population and temporally inconsistently blurred boundaries between touching cells. We also designed a data association algorithm to address the violation of usual assumption of small displacements. Recognizing that the violation was in the mixed cell population composed of two cell groups while the assumption held within each group, we proposed to solve the seemingly impossible mission by de-mixing the two groups of cell motion modes without known labels. We demonstrated the effectiveness of MicTracker in solving our problem on in vivo real data.ETDIn CopyrightMotile cells3D video analysisCell trackingin vivoAutomated Identification and Tracking of Motile Oligodendrocyte Precursor Cells (OPCs) from Time-lapse 3D Microscopic Imaging Data of Cell Clusters in vivoDissertation