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Morphological Characterization of Antibiotic Combinations.

Authors :
Coram MA
Wang L
Godinez WJ
Barkan DT
Armstrong Z
Ando DM
Feng BY
Source :
ACS infectious diseases [ACS Infect Dis] 2022 Jan 14; Vol. 8 (1), pp. 66-77. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Dec 22.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Combination therapies are common in many therapeutic contexts, including infectious diseases and cancer. A common approach for evaluating combinations in vitro is to assess effects on cell growth as synergistic, antagonistic, or neutral using "checkerboard" experiments to systematically sample combinations of agents in multiple doses. To further understand the effects of antibiotic combinations, we employed high-content imaging to study the morphological changes caused by combination treatments in checkerboard experiments. Using an automated, unsupervised image analysis approach to group morphologies, and an "expert-in-the-loop" to annotate them, we attributed the heterogeneous morphological changes of Escherichia coli cells to varying doses of both single-agent and combination treatments. We identified patterns of morphological change, including morphological potentiation, competition, and the emergence of unexpected morphologies. We found these frequently did not correlate with synergistic or antagonistic effects on viability, suggesting morphological approaches may provide a distinctive signature of the biological interaction between compounds over a range of conditions. Among the unexpected morphologies we observed, there were transitional changes associated with intermediate doses of compounds and uncharacterized phenotypes associated with well-studied antibiotics. Our approach exemplifies how unsupervised image analysis and expert knowledge can be combined to reckon with complex phenotypic changes arising from combination screening, dose titrations, or polypharmacology. In this way, quantification of morphological diversity across treatment conditions could aid in analysis and prioritization of complementary pairings of antibiotic agents by more closely capturing the true signature of the integrated cellular response.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2373-8227
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ACS infectious diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34937332
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsinfecdis.1c00312