A Fiji process for quantifying fluorescent puncta in linear cellular structures

MicroPubl Biol. 2023 Dec 14:2023:10.17912/micropub.biology.001003. doi: 10.17912/micropub.biology.001003. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Understanding the cell biology of protein trafficking and homeostasis requires reproducible methods for identifying and quantifying proteins within cells or cellular structures. Imaging protocols for measuring punctate protein accumulation in linear structures, for example the neurites of C. elegans, have relied on proprietary software for a full range of analysis capabilities. Here we describe a set of macros written for the NIH-supported imaging software ImageJ or Fiji (Fiji is Just ImageJ) that reliably identify protein puncta so that they can be analyzed with respect to intensity, density, and width at half-maximum intensity (Full-Width, Half-Maximum, FWHM). We provide an explanation of the workflow, data outputs, and limitations of the Fiji macro. As part of this integration, we also provide two independent data sets with side-by-side analyses using the proprietary IgorPro software and the Fiji macro (Hulsey-Vincent, et al. A, B., 2023 submitted). The Fiji macro is an important new tool because it provides robust, reproducible data analysis in a free, open-source format.