Cell painting transfer increases screening hit rate

  • Cohen E
  • Corbe M
  • Franco C
  • et al.
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Abstract

Drug discovery uses high throughput screening to identify compounds that interact with a molecular target or that alter a phenotype favorably. The cautious selection of molecules used for such a screening is instrumental and is tightly related to the hit rate. In this work, we wondered if cell painting, a general-purpose image-based assay, could be used as an efficient proxy for compound selection, thus increasing the success rate of a specific assay. To this end, we considered cell painting images with 30,000 molecules treatments, and selected compounds that produced a visual effect close to the positive control of an assay, by using the Frechet Inception Distance. We then compared the hit rates of such a preselection with what was actually obtained in real screening campaigns. As a result, cell painting would have permitted a significant increase in the success rate and, even for one of the assays, would have allowed to reach 80% of the hits with 10 times fewer compounds to test. We conclude that images of a cell painting assay can be directly used for compound selection prior to screening, and we provide a simple quantitative approach in order to do so.

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Cohen, E., Corbe, M., Franco, C. A., Vasconcelos, F. F., Perez, F., Del Nery, E., … Genovesio, A. (2023). Cell painting transfer increases screening hit rate. Biological Imaging, 3. https://doi.org/10.1017/s2633903x23000077

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