Establishment of a cutting-edge imaging modality to enable multi-parameter analyses within tissues

Lead Research Organisation: University of Manchester
Department Name: School of Biological Sciences

Abstract

The development of technologies that allow the study of cells in extreme detail, measuring many different molecules simultaneously (called multi-parameter analysis), has revolutionised research within the biomedical field. These technologies have demonstrated the complexity and extreme cellular heterogeneity (variation) that exists within and underpins biological processes, spanning tissue and organismal development and physiology, through to maintenance of tissue homeostasis, aging or generation of an immune response. As a consequence, in many different research areas it now requires examination of more than 10 different molecules (in this context referred to as parameters) to simply identify a cell of interest. For example, it can require studying up to 15 different parameters to identify different immune cell subsets. Moreover, it can require 5-10 parameters to accurately define the activity or status of a cell of interest.

Whilst these multi-parameter technologies (which include techniques called flow cytometry, CyTOF and single cell RNA-sequencing), have been extremely powerful, the problem with them is that they all require that the tissue under examination is processed into single cell suspensions for analysis, and all context regarding where in the tissue the cell came from is lost. The more we reveal regarding various biological processes, the more obvious it becomes that most biological events (whether tissue homeostasis, generation of an immune response, response to injury or disease), are multi-factorial, involving the interaction of different cell types within the tissue. Moreover, the location of the cells within the tissue / organ frequently plays a major role in influencing the outcome of the response. Consequently, it has become clear that to truly understand how a particular cell population contributes to a biological process, or how a biological process develops and is regulated during health, or how it is modified during disease, it is critical to complement investigations such as flow cytometry, CyTOF and single cell transcriptomics, with multi-parameter investigations within the tissue (i.e. studying cells and biological processes within the physiological tissue structure). Historically this has not been possible as traditional imaging approaches for examining tissues have only allowed the study of up to 5 different molecules at a time, which means researchers have not even been able to identify their cell of interest within the tissue environment, let alone investigate how the cell interacts with other cells or define where it is located within the tissue structure.

To support multi parameter biological examinations within a physiological tissue environment, Fluidigm has recently developed the Hyperion Imaging mass cytometer system that allows the concurrent imaging of up to 37 parameters within an individual tissue section. Thus, the Hyperion system fundamentally changes, by approximately 10 fold, the power of multi-parameter histological investigations that are possible within biological research. In this application we request funds to purchase a Hyperion imaging system. The purchase of the Hyperion system will provide a step change in the ability of our consortium (outlined in the case for support), as well as other researchers at Manchester, and within the North West of England, to perform multi-parameter imaging investigations within physiological tissue environments. This will provide fundamental new insights into many different biological processes integral within different BBSRC strategy areas, particularly within the "understanding the rules of life" and the "bioscience for an integrated understanding of health" themes.

Technical Summary

Technologies that enable high-dimensional cellular phenotyping, such as flow cytometry, CyTOF and single cell transcriptomics underpin research within many areas of Biomedical science, including those within key BBSRC strategic themes. However, an inherent limitation of these methodologies is that they provide no physiological information on the spatial context of identified cells within tissues or the interrelationship of cells with the tissue microenvironment. Thus, although they have revealed the complexity and heterogeneity evident within biology, these methodologies do not resolve the roles of cells (or molecules) during biological processes. Consequently, one of the critical next steps in biomedical research must be the integration of high dimensional cellular phenotyping investigations, such as flow cytometry and CyTOF, with imaging modalities that provide complementary, multi-parameter and quantitative physiological tissue-context.

Researchers at Manchester currently have no capacity to perform high dimensional quantitative analysis of tissues (the current capacity is 5 parameter immunofluorescence staining). Thus, the current histological and bioimaging capabilities at Manchester are not compatible with many modern research programmes that require deep profiling of tissues to firstly identify complex cellular phenotypes (often requiring >10 parameters), and then to resolve the compartmentalisation and spatial relationship between cells of interest and the tissue environment. As such, in this application we request funds to purchase the Fluidigm Hyperion system, which is a transformative new system for immunohistochemical analysis that enables the multiplex imaging of up to 37 parameters. Purchase of the Hyperion will thus provide a step change in the capacity of scientists at Manchester to study and understand, with necessary multi-parameter and spatial context, various different biological processes within BBSRC priority research areas.

Planned Impact

This application requests a Hyperion Imaging CyTOF machine that will support the research of a large consortium of users at the University of Manchester and which will be of benefit to the wider research community in the North West of England. The results obtained using the Hyperion, studying myriad biological processes spanning different BBSRC priority areas, will be of significant interest to researchers in academia and industrial sectors as well as clinicians working with patients with relevant conditions. Through the various engagement and outreach activities, the research using the Hyperion will also have impact with the general public, school and university students.

The purchase of the Hyperion will immediately benefit researchers in the consortium. The Hyperion will allow the researchers to revolutionise the nature of the investigations undertaken within ongoing research programmes, which will dramatically enhance the impact of their research. This will have a direct and immediate benefit in terms of publications and will underpin planned grant applications. The Hyperion will also facilitate and promote new interdisciplinary research within the academic research community at University of Manchester, and more broadly in the North West of England and elsewhere. Results and data analysis tools that will be developed, particularly in the area of quantitative biology, to exploit the capabilities of the Hyperion system, will be shared for use of all researchers.

As the Hyperion represents a transformative technology that fundamentally alters the nature of quantitative and multi-parameter investigations possible in cells within their physiological tissue environment, the purchase of the machine will have significant impact for biotechnology. The purchase of the machine will catalyse development and utilisation of new biotechnology tools to multiplex the study of intracellular RNA, proteins and structures with high sensitivity, which will lead to generation of resources that will be useful for the wider scientific community. We expect a high potential impact in the biotechnology area and will actively search for relevant systems/companies to share our knowledge

The results to be obtained using the Hyperion system will provide fundamental new insights into the biology of complex cellular, tissue / organ and organismal processes. We anticipate that the results will have impact for identifying new mechanisms involved in health and disease, which will be of interest to researchers in translational science, clinicians, and those scientists in the industrial sectors.

We will communicate our results through various public engagement activities and outreach events. Images generated from the Hyperion will be colourful, intuitive, attractive and make science more accessible. Our results will be used to educate members of the public how research within physiological tissue environments provides critical insight into a range of different biological processes. With reference to the projects outlined in the case for support, this will help raise awareness of the science underlying the impact of aging, how tissue homeostasis is controlled, the role and importance of commensal microbes in the body, the biology of the brain, and how and why the body is controlled though a circadian cycle. However, in the longer term as the breadth of research performed using the Hyperion increases, we expect our results to have long term impact in public engagement across many areas of Biomedical science.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description The award funded the purchase of a new technology that was designed to allow researchers to analyse tissues in high dimensional detail. In other words, the technology would allow researchers to examine in unprecedented detail the individual cell populations that were present in a tissue section, and understand how these cells localised in specific areas of the tissue (whether diseased or damaged tissue regions, or in tissue areas with specialised functions), and how these cells interacted with other cells or tissue components to establish the tissue architecture and promote development, health or disease.

As the technology was very new at the time of purchase, there was not an extensive database of literature for the operation of the machine, optimisation of tissue staining protocols, or methods for analysing the complex generated datasets. As such, the researchers on the award had to spend significant time and energy to optimise the technology for various research projects.

The technology has now been fully optimised and experimental protocols are validated, which is allowing researchers (and collaborators outside of the University) to successfully obtain novel data demonstrating the pathology and immune landscape (the abundance and interactions of immune cells present) in various different conditions and diseases, including covid-19, brain tumours, malaria, lung fibrosis and stroke, as well as during tissue development and testing how novel therapeutic approaches improve tissue health and recovery from disease.

As such, the work on the award has verified the need and impact of high dimensional spatial analyses to increase our understanding of the basis of tissue health and disease.
Exploitation Route The outcomes of this funding provides the framework for other researchers to perform high dimensional imaging studies in their own projects, providing an interdisciplinary resource that will substantially improve the impact of their investigations.
In due course, the generated high dimensional imaging mass cytometry datasets will be made publicly available for use by other researchers.
Sectors Healthcare,Pharmaceuticals and Medical Biotechnology

 
Description The data created with the equipment funded within this award has now been presented and discussed at various meetings, including clinical and patient-focussed symposia. This has allowed researchers associated with the work to outline and explain how interrogating the cellular positioning and neoplastic and immune cell landscape within the tumour may influence disease trajectory, and provide new insight into development of targeted therapeutics. This has been particularly successful when engaging with the charity NF2 Biosolutions, which funds PhD students in the PI laboratories, and engaging with patients and families affected by the NF2-SWN syndrome. This has led to the NF2 Biosolutions charity prioritising new avenues for funding and support.
First Year Of Impact 2022
Sector Healthcare
Impact Types Societal

 
Description Dissecting how the NLRP3 inflammasome provokes blood brain barrier dysfunction during cerebral malaria
Amount £559,806 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/W028867/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 12/2022 
End 11/2025
 
Description MITS for lung pathology and immune response in fatal COVID-19 in Malawi
Amount $685,373 (USD)
Funding ID INV-018138 
Organisation Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation 
Sector Charity/Non Profit
Country United States
Start 07/2020 
End 12/2021
 
Description MRC FAPESP: Defining the role of the hematopoietic parasite reservoir in Plasmodium vivax infection and pathology
Amount £881,680 (GBP)
Funding ID MR/W018802/1 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 06/2022 
End 05/2026
 
Title Development of computational workflow for analysing high dimensional imaging mass cytometry data 
Description A bespoke Python-based workflow allowing spatial and statistical interpretation of high dimensional imaging data. This includes quantification and identification of single cell populations, cell-cell interaction, neighbourhood analyses and proximity, network analyses and diversfication and pseduotime inference. 
Type Of Material Technology assay or reagent 
Year Produced 2023 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact The workflow is currently being used in a number of manuscripts in preparation 
 
Title High Dimensional imaging mass cytometry dataset of covid-19 lung pathology in fatal cases from Brazil 
Description High Dimensional imaging mass cytometry dataset of covid-19 lung pathology in fatal cases from Brazil. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact The database will be included in a manuscript under preparation for submission. 
 
Title High dimensional imaging cytof dataset of covid-19 lung pathology in fatal cases from Malawi 
Description High dimensional imaging cytof dataset of covid-19 lung pathology in fatal cases from Malawi 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact The dataset is included in a manuscript in preparation for submission. 
 
Title High dimensional imaging cytof dataset of immune landscape in brain tumours 
Description High dimensional imaging cytof dataset of immune landscape in brain tumours 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Generation of high dimensional imaging cytof dataset of immune landscape of brain tumours that will form the foundation of manuscripts in preparation for submission. 
 
Title High dimensional imaging mass cytometry dataset on NF2 vestibular schwannoma 
Description 18 cases of NF2 vestibular schwannoma were incorporated into a tissue microarray and 5-6 regions of interest from each tumour were scanned on the imaging mass cytometer, using a panel of 38 antibodies to assess neoplastic cell and immune cell communicaiton. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2022 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Manuscript in progress 
 
Title High dimensional imaging mass cytometry dataset on human intracerebral haemorrhage 
Description Human ICH samples were stained with a panel of 40 antibodies and were scanned on a imaging mass cytometer, to assess the architecture and immune landscape within the haemorrhagic tissue. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2023 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact None as yet as manuscript is in preparation 
 
Description Collaboration to assess the spatial pathology and immune landscape in brain tumours 
Organisation NF2 BioSolutions
Country United States 
Sector Charity/Non Profit 
PI Contribution We have performed high dimensional imaging mass cytometry on human glioblastoma, glioma and vestibular schwannoma samples
Collaborator Contribution NF2 biosolutions provided funds for a PhD student to perform the NF2 vestibular schwannoma work, and have helped facility access to tissues and patient engagement Salford and Uppsala provided brain tumour samples for analysis
Impact Generation of high dimensional imaging mass cytometry datasets showing the spatial landscape of brain tumours.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Collaboration to assess the spatial pathology and immune landscape in brain tumours 
Organisation Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Public 
PI Contribution We have performed high dimensional imaging mass cytometry on human glioblastoma, glioma and vestibular schwannoma samples
Collaborator Contribution NF2 biosolutions provided funds for a PhD student to perform the NF2 vestibular schwannoma work, and have helped facility access to tissues and patient engagement Salford and Uppsala provided brain tumour samples for analysis
Impact Generation of high dimensional imaging mass cytometry datasets showing the spatial landscape of brain tumours.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Collaboration to assess the spatial pathology and immune landscape in brain tumours 
Organisation Uppsala University
Country Sweden 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We have performed high dimensional imaging mass cytometry on human glioblastoma, glioma and vestibular schwannoma samples
Collaborator Contribution NF2 biosolutions provided funds for a PhD student to perform the NF2 vestibular schwannoma work, and have helped facility access to tissues and patient engagement Salford and Uppsala provided brain tumour samples for analysis
Impact Generation of high dimensional imaging mass cytometry datasets showing the spatial landscape of brain tumours.
Start Year 2019
 
Description Collaboration to study the role of the hematopoietic parasite reservoir during Plasmodium vivax infection and pathology 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution My team and I will perform high dimensional imaging on bone marrow and spleen samples from human P. vivax infected patients, to assess where particular forms of the parasite compartmentalise and shape tissue health during malaria.
Collaborator Contribution The partners coordinated obtaining the samples and are performing other multi-modal studies on the samples, to integrate with the high dimensional imaging data
Impact None as of yet as collaboration has just started
Start Year 2022
 
Description Collaboration with researchers in Glasgow and Brazil to study pathology of covid-19 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We performed Hyperion imaging mass cytometry on post-mortem covid-19 lung tissue
Collaborator Contribution They obtained the tissue and performed other mechanistic studies on the tissue, including defining tissue regions of interest for our anlayses.
Impact We have generated high dimensional imaging datasets revealing the pathology of covid-19 in Brazil.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Collaboration with researchers in Glasgow and Malawi to study pathology of covid-19 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Department Institute of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We performed high dimensional imaging mass cytometry on post mortem lung tissue from individuals with covid-19 from Malawi, Africa
Collaborator Contribution They obtained the post-mortem tissue from fatal cases of covid-19 in Malawi and made all tissue microarrays for analysis. They also performed additional experiments on the tissue to complement investigations performed in Manchester
Impact High dimensional imaging dataset of covid-19 pathology in fatal cases in Malawi, Africa.
Start Year 2020
 
Description Collaboration with researchers to study the pathogenesis of human malaria 
Organisation University of Glasgow
Department Institute of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We are to perform high dimensional imaging mass cytometry to analyse brains, spleens and bone marrow from fatal cases of Plasmodium spp. infections.
Collaborator Contribution They obtained all relevant tissue and led the funding applications for the work.
Impact None as of yet.
Start Year 2021
 
Description Defining the hematopoietic parasite reservoir during Plasmodium falciparum infection 
Organisation ETH Zurich
Country Switzerland 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution My team will perform high dimensional imaging and suspension CyTOF on post-mortem spleen samples obtained from fatal P. falciparum infections
Collaborator Contribution The partners have obtained the samples and are performing multi-modal studies, including single-cell RNA-seq and CITE-seq on corresponding samples.
Impact None as of yet
Start Year 2022