CenSegNet: a generalist high-throughput deep learning framework for centrosome phenotyping at spatial and single-cell resolution in heterogeneous tissues
Authors/Creators
- 1. School of Biological Sciences, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK
- 2. School of Electronics and Computer Science, University of Southampton, Southampton SO17 1BJ, UK
- 3. The Cavendish Laboratory, Department of Physics, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, CB3 0FZ, UK
- 4. Department of Oncology, Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Cambridge, UK, University of Cambridge, CB2 0QQ, UK
- 5. University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, Southampton, SO16 6YD, UK
- 6. Centre for Cancer Immunology, School of Cancer Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton, SO16 6YD, UK
Description
Centrosome amplification (CA) is a hallmark of epithelial cancers, yet its spatial complexity and phenotypic heterogeneity remain poorly resolved due to limitations in conventional image analysis. We present CenSegNet (Centrosome Segmentation Network), a modular deep learning framework for high-resolution, context-aware segmentation of centrosomes and epithelial architecture across diverse tissue types. Integrating a dual-branch architecture with uncertainty-guided refinement, CenSegNet achieves state-of-the-art performance and generalisability across both immunofluorescence and immunohistochemistry modalities, outperforming existing models in accuracy and morphological fidelity. Applied to tissue microarrays (TMAs) containing 911 breast cancer sample cores from 127 patients, CenSegNet enables the first large-scale, spatially resolved quantification of numerical and structural CA at single-cell resolution. These CA subtypes are mechanistically uncoupled, exhibiting distinct spatial distributions, age-dependent dynamics, and associations with histological tumour grade, hormone receptor status, genomic alterations, and nodal involvement. Discordant CA profiles at tumour margins are linked to local aggressiveness and stromal remodelling, underscoring their clinical relevance. To support broad adoption and reproducibility, CenSegNet is released as an open-source Python library. Together, our findings establish CenSegNet as a scalable, generalisable platform for spatially resolved centrosome phenotyping in intact tissues, enabling systematic dissection of the biology of this organelle and its dysregulation in cancer and other epithelial diseases.
For more information about the study, please read our bioRxiv preprint https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.09.15.676250v1 and visit our Github repository https://github.com/SKELab/CenSegNet/
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CenSegNet-main.zip
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