A Sensitive Thresholding Method for Confocal Laser Scanning Microscope Image Stacks of Microbial Biofilms

Abstract Biofilms are surface-attached microbial communities whose architecture can be captured with confocal microscopy. Manual or automatic thresholding of acquired images is often needed to help distinguish biofilm biomass from background noise. However, manual thresholding is subjective and curr...

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Autores principales: Ting L. Luo, Marisa C. Eisenberg, Michael A. L. Hayashi, Carlos Gonzalez-Cabezas, Betsy Foxman, Carl F. Marrs, Alexander H. Rickard
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Nature Portfolio 2018
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/a4dea36ed02c464d90ccebb189d9b4e1
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Sumario:Abstract Biofilms are surface-attached microbial communities whose architecture can be captured with confocal microscopy. Manual or automatic thresholding of acquired images is often needed to help distinguish biofilm biomass from background noise. However, manual thresholding is subjective and current automatic thresholding methods can lead to loss of meaningful data. Here, we describe an automatic thresholding method designed for confocal fluorescent signal, termed the biovolume elasticity method (BEM). We evaluated BEM using confocal image stacks of oral biofilms grown in pooled human saliva. Image stacks were thresholded manually and automatically with three different methods; Otsu, iterative selection (IS), and BEM. Effects on biovolume, surface area, and number of objects detected indicated that the BEM was the least aggressive at removing signal, and provided the greatest visual and quantitative acuity of single cells. Thus, thresholding with BEM offers a sensitive, automatic, and tunable method to maintain biofilm architectural properties for subsequent analysis.