1. Megapixel camera arrays enable high-resolution animal tracking in multiwell plates.
- Author
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Barlow, Ida L., Feriani, Luigi, Minga, Eleni, McDermott-Rouse, Adam, O'Brien, Thomas James, Liu, Ziwei, Hofbauer, Maximilian, Stowers, John R., Andersen, Erik C., Ding, Siyu Serena, and Brown, André E. X.
- Subjects
ANIMAL tracks ,DNA fingerprinting ,ANIMAL flight ,CAENORHABDITIS elegans ,IMAGING systems ,FISH food ,CAMERAS - Abstract
Tracking small laboratory animals such as flies, fish, and worms is used for phenotyping in neuroscience, genetics, disease modelling, and drug discovery. An imaging system with sufficient throughput and spatiotemporal resolution would be capable of imaging a large number of animals, estimating their pose, and quantifying detailed behavioural differences at a scale where hundreds of treatments could be tested simultaneously. Here we report an array of six 12-megapixel cameras that record all the wells of a 96-well plate with sufficient resolution to estimate the pose of C. elegans worms and to extract high-dimensional phenotypic fingerprints. We use the system to study behavioural variability across wild isolates, the sensitisation of worms to repeated blue light stimulation, the phenotypes of worm disease models, and worms' behavioural responses to drug treatment. Because the system is compatible with standard multiwell plates, it makes computational ethological approaches accessible in existing high-throughput pipelines. A multiplexed machine-vision-based tracking system enables the high-content analysis of C. elegans behavior in several 96-well plates at a time and shows its utility for comparisons across multiple genotypes and upon drug treatment, tackling the bottlenecks in behavioural quantification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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