Back to Search Start Over

The in silico macrophage: toward a better understanding of inflammatory disease

Authors :
Ghazal, Peter
Watterson, Steven
Robertson, Kevin
Kluth, David C
Source :
Genome Medicine 2011, 3:4 (22 January 2011)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Macrophages function as sentinel, cell-regulatory hubs capable of initiating, perpetuating and contributing to the resolution of an inflammatory response, following their activation from a resting state. Highly complex and varied gene expression programs within the macrophage enable such functional diversity. To investigate how programs of gene expression relate to the phenotypic attributes of the macrophage, the development of in silico modeling methods is needed. Such models need to cover multiple scales, from molecular pathways in cell-autonomous immunity and intercellular communication pathways in tissue inflammation to whole organism response pathways in systemic disease. Here, we highlight the potential of in silico macrophage modeling as an amenable and important yet under-exploited tool in aiding in our understanding of the immune inflammatory response. We also discuss how in silico macrophage modeling can help in future therapeutic strategies for modulating both the acute protective effects of inflammation (such as host defense and tissue repair) and the harmful chronic effects (such as autoimmune diseases).<br />Comment: 7 pages plus 1 figure

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Genome Medicine 2011, 3:4 (22 January 2011)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1102.3369
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/gm218