Fr. 238.00

Bioinformatics for Immunomics

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Like many words, the term "immunomics" equates to different ideas contingent on context. For a brief span, immunomics meant the study of the Immunome, of which there were, in turn, several different definitions. A now largely defunct meaning rendered the Immunome as the set of antigenic peptides or immunogenic proteins within a single microorganism - be that virus, bacteria, fungus, or parasite - or microbial population, or antigenic or allergenic proteins and peptides derived from the environment as a whole, containing also proteins from eukaryotic sources. However, times have changed and the meaning of immunomics has also changed. Other newer definitions of the Immunome have come to focus on the plethora of immunological receptors and accessory molecules that comprise the host immune arsenal. Today, Immunomics or immunogenomics is now most often used as a synonym for high-throughput genome-based immunology. This is the study of aspects of the immune system using high-throughput techniques within a conc- tual landscape borne of both clinical and biophysical thinking.

List of contents

An Editorial.- Computational Vaccinology.- Immunological databases.- IPD- the Immuno Polymorphism Database. - The IMGT/HLA Database.- Ontology Development for the Immune Epitope Database.- TEPIDAS: A Das Server for Integrating T-cell Epitope Annotations.- Databases and Web-based Tools for Innate Immunity.- Structural Immunoinformatics: Understanding MHC-Peptide-TR Binding.- Discovering of Conserved Epitopes Through Sequence Variability Analyses.- Turnable Detectors for Artificial Immune Systems: From Model to Algorithm.- Defining the Elusive Molecular Self.- A Bioinformatic Platform for a Bayesian, Multiphased, Multilevel Analysis in Immunogenomics.

Summary

Like many words, the term “immunomics” equates to different ideas contingent on context. For a brief span, immunomics meant the study of the Immunome, of which there were, in turn, several different definitions. A now largely defunct meaning rendered the Immunome as the set of antigenic peptides or immunogenic proteins within a single microorganism – be that virus, bacteria, fungus, or parasite – or microbial population, or antigenic or allergenic proteins and peptides derived from the environment as a whole, containing also proteins from eukaryotic sources. However, times have changed and the meaning of immunomics has also changed. Other newer definitions of the Immunome have come to focus on the plethora of immunological receptors and accessory molecules that comprise the host immune arsenal. Today, Immunomics or immunogenomics is now most often used as a synonym for high-throughput genome-based immunology. This is the study of aspects of the immune system using high-throughput techniques within a conc- tual landscape borne of both clinical and biophysical thinking.

Product details

Assisted by Matthe Davies (Editor), Matthew Davies (Editor), Darren D. R. Flower (Editor), Darren D.R. Flower (Editor), Shoba Ranganathan (Editor)
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.2014
 
EAN 9781461424857
ISBN 978-1-4614-2485-7
No. of pages 192
Weight 330 g
Illustrations XVI, 192 p.
Series Immunomics Reviews:
Immunomics Reviews:
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine > Clinical medicine

B, Immunology, Microbiology (non-medical), molecular biology, bioinformatics, microbiology, Human Genetics, Biomedical and Life Sciences, Medical Genetics, Information technology: general issues

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