Virtual immune system roadmap unveiled

Tomas Helikar. by Craig Chandler | University Communication
Tomas Helikar. by Craig Chandler | University Communication

by Leslie Reed | University Communication and Marketing

An article published May 20 in Nature Digital Medicine provides a step-by-step plan for an international effort to create a digital twin of the human immune system.

“This paper outlines a road map that the scientific community should take in building, developing and applying a digital twin of the immune system,” said Tomas Helikar, a University of Nebraska–Lincoln biochemist who is one of 10 co-authors from six universities from around the world. Earlier this year, the National Institutes of Health renewed a five-year $1.8 million grant for him to continue his work in the area.

“This is an effort that will require the collaboration of computational biologists, immunologists, clinicians, mathematicians and computer scientists,” he said. “Trying to break down this complexity down into measurable and achievable steps has been a challenge. This paper is addressing that.”

A digital twin of the immune system would be a breakthrough that could offer precision medicine for a wide array of ailments, including cancer, autoimmune disease and viral infections like COVID-19.

Read more:
https://news.unl.edu/newsrooms/today/article/virtual-immune-system-roadmap-unveiled/