Systems vaccinology: its promise and challenge for HIV vaccine development.
Emory Vaccine Center, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Journal Article: Current opinion in HIV and AIDS 11/2011; 7(1):24-31. DOI: 10.1097/COH.0b013e32834dc37b
Abstract
Systems biology successfully applied to yellow-fever and influenza vaccines has led to the discovery of signatures that predict vaccine immunogenicity, and promises to advance basic immunology research by providing novel mechanistic insights about immune regulation. However a major challenge of systems vaccinology concerns the analyses and interpretation of the large and noisy data sets generated by high-throughput techniques. Overcoming these issues, we envision that systems vaccinology will have a potential impact on vaccine development, including HIV vaccines.
High-throughput technologies allow the investigation of vaccine-induced immune responses at system and molecular levels. These are currently being used to unravel new molecular insights about the immune system, and are on the verge of being integrated into clinical trials to enable rational vaccine design and development.
Source: PubMed
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