Validation of 3D EM Reconstructions: The Phantom in the Noise

被引:16
|
作者
Heymann, J. Bernard [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Inst Hlth, Natl Inst Arthrit & Musculoskeletal & Skin Dis, 50 South Dr, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
来源
AIMS BIOPHYSICS | 2015年 / 2卷 / 01期
关键词
electron microscopy; 3D image processing; single particle analysis; gaussian noise; signal-to-noise ratio; structural biology; resolution;
D O I
10.3934/biophy.2015.1.21
中图分类号
Q6 [生物物理学];
学科分类号
071011 ;
摘要
Validation is a necessity to trust the structures solved by electron microscopy by single particle techniques. The impressive achievements in single particle reconstruction fuel its expansion beyond a small community of image processing experts. This poses the risk of inappropriate data processing with dubious results. Nowhere is it more clearly illustrated than in the recovery of a reference density map from pure noise aligned to that map-a phantom in the noise. Appropriate use of existing validating methods such as resolution-limited alignment and the processing of independent data sets ("gold standard") avoid this pitfall. However, these methods can be undermined by biases introduced in various subtle ways. How can we test that a map is a coherent structure present in the images selected from the micrographs? In stead of viewing the phantom emerging from noise as a cautionary tale, it should be used as a defining baseline. Any map is always recoverable from noise images, provided a sufficient number of images are aligned and used in reconstruction. However, with smaller numbers of images, the expected coherence in the real particle images should yield better reconstructions than equivalent numbers of noise or background images, even without masking or imposing resolution limits as potential biases. The validation test proposed is therefore a simple alignment of a limited number of micrograph and noise images against the final reconstruction as reference, demonstrating that the micrograph images yield a better reconstruction. I examine synthetic cases to relate the resolution of a reconstruction to the alignment error as a function of the signal-to-noise ratio. I also administered the test to real cases of publicly available data. Adopting such a test can aid the microscopist in assessing the usefulness of the micrographs taken before committing to lengthy processing with questionable outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:21 / 35
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] 3D gold in situ labelling in the EM
    González-Melendi, P
    Shaw, P
    PLANT JOURNAL, 2002, 29 (02): : 237 - 243
  • [42] 3D EM at Work Selected Papers
    Macnae, James
    EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICS, 2006, 37 (03) : 222 - 222
  • [43] Powerful, Affordable 3D EM Simulation
    不详
    MICROWAVE JOURNAL, 2022, 65 (11) : 108 - 109
  • [44] Inspection of Histological 3D Reconstructions in Virtual Reality
    Lobachev, Oleg
    Berthold, Moritz
    Pfeffer, Henriette
    Guthe, Michael
    Steiniger, Birte S. S.
    FRONTIERS IN VIRTUAL REALITY, 2021, 2
  • [45] 3D reconstructions from spectral light fields
    Farber, Vladimir
    Oiknine, Yaniv
    August, Isaac
    Stern, Adrian
    THREE-DIMENSIONAL IMAGING, VISUALIZATION, AND DISPLAY 2018, 2018, 10666
  • [46] 3D dreams - the art of David Em
    Dietrich, F
    IEEE COMPUTER GRAPHICS AND APPLICATIONS, 2000, 20 (02) : 4 - 5
  • [48] 3D FEM and EM simulations for DRFs
    Sun, JS
    Hsieh, JC
    MICROWAVE JOURNAL, 2000, 43 (12) : 106 - +
  • [49] 3D reconstructions of the Saccharomyces actin cytoskeleton.
    Karpova, TS
    McNally, JG
    Moltz, SL
    Cooper, JA
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL, 1997, 8 : 1578 - 1578
  • [50] Retrieving similar substructures on 3D neuron reconstructions
    Yang J.
    He Y.
    Liu X.
    Yang, Jian (jianyang@bjut.edu.cn), 1600, Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH (07):