Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are increasingly used as regenerative therapies for patients in the preclinical and clinical phases of various diseases. However, the main limitations of such therapies include functional heterogeneity and the lack of appropriate quality control (QC) methods for functional screening of MSC lines; thus, clinical outcomes are inconsistent. Recently, machine learning (ML)-based methods, in conjunction with single-cell morphological profiling, have been proposed as alternatives to conventional in vitro/vivo assays that evaluate MSC functions. Such methods perform in silico analyses of MSC functions by training ML algorithms to find highly nonlinear connections between MSC functions and morphology. Although such approaches are promising, they are limited in that extensive, high-content single-cell imaging is required; moreover, manually identified morphological features cannot be generalized to other experimental settings. To address these limitations, we propose an end-to-end deep learning (DL) framework for functional screening of MSC lines using live-cell microscopic images of MSC populations. We quantitatively evaluate various convolutional neural network (CNN) models and demonstrate that our method accurately classifies in vitro MSC lines to high/low multilineage differentiating stress-enduring (MUSE) cells markers from multiple donors. A total of 6,120 cell images were obtained from 8 MSC lines, and they were classified into two groups according to MUSE cell markers analyzed by immunofluorescence staining and FACS. The optimized DenseNet121 model showed area under the curve (AUC) 0.975, accuracy 0.922, F1 0.922, sensitivity 0.905, specificity 0.942, positive predictive value 0.940, and negative predictive value 0.908. Therefore, our DL-based framework is a convenient high-throughput method that could serve as an effective QC strategy in future clinical biomanufacturing processes.
Adult stem cell-based therapeutic approaches have great potential in regenerative medicine because of their immunoregulatory properties and multidifferentiation capacity. Nevertheless, the outcomes of stem cell‑based therapies to date have shown inconsistent efficacy owing to donor variation, thwarting the expectation of clinical effects. However, such donor dependency has been elucidated by biological consequences that current research could not predict. Here, we introduce cellular morphology-based prediction to determine the multipotency rate of human nasal turbinate stem cells (hNTSCs), aiming to predict the differentiation rate of keratocyte progenitors. We characterized the overall genes and morphologies of hNTSCs from five donors and compared stemness-related properties, including multipotency and specific lineages, using mRNA sequencing. It was demonstrated that transformation factors affecting the principal components were highly related to cell morphology. We then performed a convolutional neural network-based analysis, which enabled us to assess the multipotency level of each cell group based on their morphologies with 85.98% accuracy. Surprisingly, the trend in expression levels after ex vivo differentiation matched well with the deep learning prediction. These results suggest that AI‑assisted cellular behavioral prediction can be utilized to perform quantitative, non-invasive, single-cell, and multimarker characterizations of live stem cells for improved quality control in clinical cell therapies.
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