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Unsupervised representation learning of chromatin images identifies changes in cell state and tissue organization in DCIS

Xinyi Zhang, Saradha Venkatachalapathy, Daniel Paysan, Paulina Schaerer, Claudio Tripodo, Caroline Uhler, G. V. Shivashankar

2024Nature Communications12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) is a pre-invasive tumor that can progress to invasive breast cancer, a leading cause of cancer death. We generate a large-scale tissue microarray dataset of chromatin images, from 560 samples from 122 female patients in 3 disease stages and 11 phenotypic categories. Using representation learning on chromatin images alone, without multiplexed staining or high-throughput sequencing, we identify eight morphological cell states and tissue features marking DCIS. All cell states are observed in all disease stages with different proportions, indicating that cell states enriched in invasive cancer exist in small fractions in normal breast tissue. Tissue-level analysis reveals significant changes in the spatial organization of cell states across disease stages, which is predictive of disease stage and phenotypic category. Taken together, we show that chromatin imaging represents a powerful measure of cell state and disease stage of DCIS, providing a simple and effective tumor biomarker.

Topics & Concepts

ChromatinRepresentation (politics)Computer scienceComputational biologySpatial organizationArtificial intelligenceState (computer science)Pattern recognition (psychology)BiologyEvolutionary biologyGeneticsDNAPoliticsLawPolitical scienceAlgorithmCell Image Analysis TechniquesSingle-cell and spatial transcriptomicsAI in cancer detection