Abstract: |
In E. coli, Z-ring formation precedes the assembly of the membrane that partitions a cell into two daughter
cells. Initially, as FtsZ proteins are expressed, they preferentially locate at the poles. After, they form a ring
at midcell, in between the nucleoids, ‘marking’ where a constriction will form. Finally, the ring becomes a
circle, where the septum separating the daughter cells forms. Being the temporal-spatial organization of FtsZ
noisy, differing between cells in timing and location, its study requires observing many cells by time-lapse
microscopy. To assist, image and signal processing methods are needed to extract information unbiasedly
from many cells. Also, one needs automatic identification of the ring formation stage in individual cells. Here
we used three classification methods to identify the stage of ring formation from microscopy images: Decision
Tree (DT), Support Vector Machine (SVM), and Regularized Multinomial Logistic regression (RMLR). We
find that RMLR performs better (higher 10-fold cross-validated accuracy, ACC). Our study will assist future
studies at the single cell level of the spatio-temporal dynamics of cell division in E. coli. |