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Seeking Windows of Opportunity to Shape Lifelong Immune Health: A Network-Based Strategy to Predict and Prioritize Markers of Early Life Immune Modulation

A healthy immune status is strongly conditioned during early life stages. Insights into the molecular drivers of early life immune development and function are prerequisite to identify strategies to enhance immune health. Even though several starting points for targeted immune modulation have been i...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: van Bilsen, Jolanda H. M., Dulos, Remon, van Stee, Mariël F., Meima, Marie Y., Rouhani Rankouhi, Tanja, Neergaard Jacobsen, Lotte, Staudt Kvistgaard, Anne, Garthoff, Jossie A., Knippels, Léon M. J., Knipping, Karen, Houben, Geert F., Verschuren, Lars, Meijerink, Marjolein, Krishnan, Shaji
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7182036/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32362896
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2020.00644
Descripción
Sumario:A healthy immune status is strongly conditioned during early life stages. Insights into the molecular drivers of early life immune development and function are prerequisite to identify strategies to enhance immune health. Even though several starting points for targeted immune modulation have been identified and are being developed into prophylactic or therapeutic approaches, there is no regulatory guidance on how to assess the risk and benefit balance of such interventions. Six early life immune causal networks, each compromising a different time period in early life (the 1st, 2nd, 3rd trimester of gestations, birth, newborn, and infant period), were generated. Thereto information was extracted and structured from early life literature using the automated text mining and machine learning tool: Integrated Network and Dynamical Reasoning Assembler (INDRA). The tool identified relevant entities (e.g., genes/proteins/metabolites/processes/diseases), extracted causal relationships among these entities, and assembled them into early life-immune causal networks. These causal early life immune networks were denoised using GeneMania, enriched with data from the gene-disease association database DisGeNET and Gene Ontology resource tools (GO/GO-SLIM), inferred missing relationships and added expert knowledge to generate information-dense early life immune networks. Analysis of the six early life immune networks by PageRank, not only confirmed the central role of the “commonly used immune markers” (e.g., chemokines, interleukins, IFN, TNF, TGFB, and other immune activation regulators (e.g., CD55, FOXP3, GATA3, CD79A, C4BPA), but also identified less obvious candidates (e.g., CYP1A2, FOXK2, NELFCD, RENBP). Comparison of the different early life periods resulted in the prediction of 11 key early life genes overlapping all early life periods (TNF, IL6, IL10, CD4, FOXP3, IL4, NELFCD, CD79A, IL5, RENBP, and IFNG), and also genes that were only described in certain early life period(s). Concluding, here we describe a network-based approach that provides a science-based and systematical method to explore the functional development of the early life immune system through time. This systems approach aids the generation of a testing strategy for the safety and efficacy of early life immune modulation by predicting the key candidate markers during different phases of early life immune development.