NEW NIAID PROGRAM AIMS TO MODEL IMMUNE RESPONSES AND KEY INFECTIOUS DISEASES

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U.S. Department of Health and Human Services 
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH 
NIH News 
National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) 
http://www3.niaid.nih.gov/

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Wednesday, July 12, 2006

CONTACT: Jason Socrates Bardi, 301-402-1663, jbardi@xxxxxxxxxxxxx


NEW NIAID PROGRAM AIMS TO MODEL IMMUNE RESPONSES AND KEY INFECTIOUS
DISEASES

A new program at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID), one of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), aims
to better understand the complex biochemical networks that regulate the
interactions between infectious organisms and the human or animal cells
they infect. The Program in Systems Immunology and Infectious Disease
Modeling (PSIIM) will employ a powerful new approach called
computational systems biology to develop a deeper understanding of how
pathogens cause disease and how the immune system responds to them. 

"Understanding the daunting complexity of biological systems is the
greatest challenge and at the cutting-edge of science in the 21st
century," says NIH Director Elias A. Zerhouni, M.D. "The creation of
this program will strengthen the intramural research program here on the
NIH campus." 

The wealth of information gleaned about the human genome in recent years
has identified many of the genes, proteins and other molecules involved
in various biological systems. But understanding how these pieces work
together to produce the complex physiological and pathological behavior
of cells and organisms is not well understood. The goal of the PSIIM,
which is a component of NIAID's Division of Intramural Research (DIR)
under the leadership of immunologist Ronald N. Germain, M.D., Ph.D., is
to create a way to ask how whole systems of molecules, cells and tissues
interact during an immune response or when confronted with an infectious
agent. 

"The idea of the PSIIM," says NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D., "is
to use systems biology to allow scientists to ask very big questions
they may not have been able to fully address even a few years ago --
such as how infectious organisms invade human cells, how the toxins they
produce cause cell and tissue destruction and how these pathogens evade
or manipulate the immune response." 

"Once we understand these interactions, we can make strategic decisions
about how to interfere with infectious disease pathology or how to
direct immune responses to better fight infections," says DIR Director
Kathryn C. Zoon, Ph.D., adding that these new insights can serve as the
starting point for the design of new drugs to treat diseases or the
development of new vaccines. 

By creating computer models of complex molecular interaction networks,
PSIIM investigators will be able to simulate the biology of cells,
tissues and, eventually, organisms. The program will also use
state-of-the-art experimental approaches to determine how closely these
simulations predict real behavior. As the models improve, scientists
should gain the ability to predict how drugs and other interventions
will affect a cell or organism and whether such treatments will be
tolerated by the host while they fight the infectious agent. Although
most of the studies will be conducted with less dangerous pathogens,
special facilities in the new C. W. Bill Young Center for Biodefense and
Emerging Infectious Diseases at NIH will enable PSIIM scientists to
examine such questions with microbes that cause diseases such as
anthrax, virulent forms of influenza, tularemia and plague. The program
will encourage collaboration between NIAID researchers and other
scientists from both inside and outside NIH in efforts to better
understand infectious diseases and the immune system. 

The cornerstone of the PSIIM research project is a software package
called Simmune, which enables biologists to model many types of
biological systems. Created by NIAID scientist Martin
Meier-Schellersheim, Ph.D., and his colleagues, the software allows a
scientist to use a simple graphical interface to easily define the
interactions between individual molecules in a large network, or the
behaviors of cells in response to external signals. Once a scientist
inputs quantitative information obtained by laboratory measurements,
Simmune can then simulate the behavior of the whole signaling network or
of an entire cell. The software does this by automatically creating a
mathematical model involving special equations and then solving these
equations for the specific conditions the user entered into the program.


Before Simmune, making such mathematical models by hand often took
months and required extensive expertise in applied mathematics. In
addition, making changes to an existing model was very time-consuming,
which limited the complexity of what could be modeled. "With Simmune, we
are trying to empower a broad range of biological experts, allowing them
to easily make and modify detailed quantitative models of the biological
systems they have studied in the lab for years. The hope is that these
models will provide a deeper understanding of "how" complex behaviors
arise, leading to new insights into disease," says Dr. Germain. "One of
the great advantages of Simmune is that it gives biologists a way to do
the difficult mathematics needed for such modeling without having to
actually be involved with the mathematics." 

In the first stringent test of the new software, Drs.
Meier-Schellersheim, Germain and their colleagues demonstrated that
Simmune can accurately predict cell function in both time and space. In
an article to be published July 21 by the journal "PLoS Computational
Biology", they describe how they used the software to model a
complicated cell-biological behavior known as chemosensing -- a
fundamental biological process whereby cells sense and respond to
external signals, such as inflammatory chemicals involved in an immune
response. Using Simmune, the NIAID team modeled what happens in a
stimulated cell to the distribution of a membrane-associated molecule
known as a phospholipid. The concentration of the phospholipid changes
during chemosensing mainly due to the action of two enzymes that
synthesize or break down this molecule. Scientists had thought that the
destructive biochemical reaction that helps produce high and low
concentrations of the phospholipid in different parts of the cell was
regulated through some unknown mechanism acting throughout the cell. But
a new model developed with Simmune predicted that the enhanced
concentration of phospholipid at the "front" end of the cell (facing the
source of chemical signals) resulted from a combination of two known
mechanisms -- a very rapid local inhibitory activity and the slower
movement of another molecule to a distant part of the cell. The NIAID
researchers, who tested their predictions in the laboratory, found that
the experimental data matched very closely what they had predicted with
Simmune. 

The real power of the software, Dr. Meier-Schellersheim adds, is that it
can do this same sort of modeling in nearly any cell-based biological
system. "This is a tool that can simulate signaling and cellular
processes in general," he says, "whatever system or process you are
interested in." Because of the general utility of the approach, PSIIM is
planning to collaborate extensively with scientists in other NIH
institutes and centers, such as the National Cancer Institute's Center
for Cancer Research, to help support research in areas such as cancer
biology that are outside of the field of immunity and infectious
diseases. 

News releases, fact sheets and other NIAID-related materials are
available on the NIAID Web site at http://www.niaid.nih.gov. 
NIAID is a component of the National Institutes of Health. NIAID
supports basic and applied research to prevent, diagnose and treat
infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted
infections, influenza, tuberculosis, malaria and illness from potential
agents of bioterrorism. NIAID also supports research on basic
immunology, transplantation and immune-related disorders, including
autoimmune diseases, asthma and allergies. 


The National Institutes of Health (NIH) -- "The Nation's Medical
Research Agency" -- includes 27 Institutes and Centers and is a
component of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. It is the
primary federal agency for conducting and supporting basic, clinical and
translational medical research, and it investigates the causes,
treatments, and cures for both common and rare diseases. For more
information about NIH and its programs, visit www.nih.gov.
  
##

-------------------------------------------------
Reference: M Meier-Schellersheim "et al." Key role of local regulation
in chemosensing revealed by a new molecular interaction-based modeling
method. "PLoS Computational Biology" DOI:
10.1371/journal.pcbi.0020082.eor (2006).
-------------------------------------------------
 
This NIH News Release is available online at:
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/jul2006/niaid-12.htm.

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