The Cytation™ 5 Cell Imaging Multimode Reader: Trends in Phenotypic Screening and Live-Cell Assays: An Interview with Dr. Peter Banks, BioTek

5 Feb 2015
Kerry Parker
CEO

Editorial article

Phenotypic screening using automated digital fluorescence microscopy and microplates is now essential for drug discovery. Dr Michelle Maxwell, Drug Discovery and Development Editor, spoke with Peter Banks, Scientific Director for BioTek, about the new Cytation™ 5 Cell Imaging Multimode Reader and how the advances in technology enable phenotypic and live-cell assays.

Dr Peter Banks is the Scientific Director at BioTek, with a PhD in analytical chemistry and a decade of experience in high content screening (HCS) and automated microscopy.

As Scientific Director, Dr Banks has the necessary domain knowledge and marketing background to assess scientific trends in the marketplace, and using the company‘s own in-house application lab develop applications to suit these trends.

In 2009, a product concept was conceived for an automated digital microscope contained in a microplate reader. This product concept was similar to expensive HCS readers such that cells could be imaged and analyzed using image analysis algorithms, but the product would also provide conventional PMT-based detection of cell population responses in microplates. Furthermore, this added value would come at a fraction of the price of the HCS readers. The BioTek team therefore developed a cell imaging multi-mode reader, called the Cytation 3, which would be of interest to a wide range of end users including microscopists, cell biologists and HCS screeners.

How has the Cytation 5 improved over the previous Cytation?
The new Cytation 5 builds on the widefield, brightfield and fluorescence microscopy capabilities of Cytation 3 with the addition of two imaging modes, phase contrast from label-free imaging and color brightfield for colormetric type staining.

In addition, there has been the addition of a six-stage turret allowing automated selection of six objectives ranging in magnification from 1.25x to 60x. Changes to the image analysis software include the ability to create montages of images and stitch them together into a contiguous image of increased field of view; z-stacking, or creating a series of images at different focal planes, followed by making an in-focus image of the stack using z-projection.

Are there any new applications of this instrument? Are there any research projects it has been used for?
Yes, the Cytation 5 has additional capabilities over the Cytation 3; namely its new application in histology, with the ability to visualize in color. We have used this Cytation 5 imaging mode in conjunction with the BioStack 4, from BioTek, to demonstrate high throughput montage and stitching imaging of stained tissue microarrays. Furthermore, this new technology enables label-free live cell phenotypic assays that quantify cell morphology changes. The phase contrast optics enables this and has been demonstrated in an application studying apoptosis through cell counting. The Cytation 5 is used in this study to investigate cell migration in cancer metastasis, in a cell line stably expressing Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP).

The technology improvements also help with the more trivial cell culture techniques, such as cell counting. Automated cell counting can be performed with the new phase contrast imaging, combined with loading a hemocytometer into the Cytation 5.

What is the future of the Cytation 5? What areas of research are you looking at?
The new areas of research and applications are being finalized but we are currently working on marketing the product with data from scaffold- and spheroid-based 3D cell culture methods involving long term kinetic phenotypic assays.

Phenotypic assays in particular are now a key trend in drug discovery, replacing target-based assays in a growing number of drug discovery programs in both Pharma and Biotech. Yet phenotypic assays provide no information of molecular target of a putative drug necessitating downstream target de-convolution and mechanism of action studies. Often these studies are enabled using cell-based assays performed with a conventional microplate reader using PMT-based optics. It is therefore beneficial to move with these trends and develop a multimode plate reader capable of imaging phenotypic type assays.

The new Cytation 5 will be used in live demos of tumor invasion assays at the BioTek booth #305 at the SLAS2015 show in Washington, D.C.

Agilent BioTek BioStack Microplate Stacker

Agilent Technologies

The Agilent BioTek BioStack microplate stacker is a compact and versatile microplate stacker, compatible with Agilent BioTek washers, dispensers, plate readers, and imaging systems. The rapid plate exchange speeds deliver increased throughput and enhanced efficiency and greater productivity.

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High-Throughput ScreeningHigh-throughput screening (HTS) is an automated drug discovery technique for identification of active compounds against a compound library. Use HTS readers and integrated assay preparation / analysis workstations to screen your compounds. Identify active compounds against various HTS libraries, including membranes, proteins and peptides and HTS cell lines. Find the best high-throughput screening products in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.Microplate Readers / DetectorsMicroplate readers are used to automate the detection and analysis of labeled or label-free components in microplates during assays or live-cell monitoring. Microplate readers are generally distinguished by their mode of detection. Types include absorbance, luminescence, fluorescence intensity, fluorescence polarization, TRF / FRET and multimode microplate readers. Microplate readers deliver a high throughput of samples by reading multiple wells simultaneously, with the 96-well format the most commonly used. As a result, microplate readers are often used in the drug discovery, bioassays, research and pharmaceutical industries for screening applications. Microplate loading can also be automated, with robotic microplate stackers to increase throughput. Find the best microplate readers in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.Cell-Based AssaysCell-based assays are used to monitor the presence, quantity and activities of a desired cellular analyte including drug molecules or biomarkers. This can reveal information on cell health (apoptosis, cytotoxicity, viability and proliferation assays), cell metabolism, cell migration and cell signaling mechanisms. Find the best cell-based assay products, kits and equipment with our peer reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receiving pricing direct from manufacturers.High-Content ScreeningHigh-content screening (HCS), also known as high-content analysis (HCA), is a high-throughput technique used in drug discovery to identify substances that alter the phenotype of cells. HCS uses fluorescent microscopic imaging and automated image analysis to investigate cellular events such as apoptosis, cell viability, GPCR activation, oxide production, neurite outgrowth, and cell signaling. Find the best fluorescent labeling reagents, cellular assays, and high-content imaging systems in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.Light MicroscopyLight microscopes or optical microscopes are used to visualize microscale objects under magnification, including cells, clinical specimens and materials. Lab equipment for light microscopy includes confocal microscopes, fluorescence microscopes, zoom and stereo microscopes. Microscope slides and imaging reagents are available for visualizing samples, as well as various microscope stages and incubators for large or temperature-sensitive samples. Find the best light microscopes in our peer-reviewed product directory: compare products, check customer reviews and receive pricing direct from manufacturers.Cell AnalysisThe analysis of cells allows researchers to understand the factors which contribute to cell health and function. These influencing processes can then be predicted and altered, leading to the development of medication and disease treatments.High ThroughputHigh throughput experiments allow the simultaneous processing of several samples. This parallelization reduces the cost per experiment and increases reproducibility and output volume of data.Live Cell ImagingLive cell imaging is the study of living cells using microscopes and high-content imaging systems. This technique provides in-depth insight into fast and complex biological processes, by allowing dynamic imaging of living cells instead of acquiring an individual image at a single point in time.Phenotypic ScreeningPhenotypic screening assesses cellular responses to compounds, enabling drug discovery and target identification. This technique is pivotal in finding effective treatments for complex diseases. Discover phenotypic screening platforms and tools with peer-reviewed comparisons and pricing in our directory.