| Literature DB >> 26909350 |
Meghna Verma1, Raquel Hontecillas1, Vida Abedi1, Andrew Leber1, Nuria Tubau-Juni1, Casandra Philipson2, Adria Carbo2, Josep Bassaganya-Riera1.
Abstract
This review highlights the fundamental role of nutrition in the maintenance of health, the immune response, and disease prevention. Emerging global mechanistic insights in the field of nutritional immunology cannot be gained through reductionist methods alone or by analyzing a single nutrient at a time. We propose to investigate nutritional immunology as a massively interacting system of interconnected multistage and multiscale networks that encompass hidden mechanisms by which nutrition, microbiome, metabolism, genetic predisposition, and the immune system interact to delineate health and disease. The review sets an unconventional path to apply complex science methodologies to nutritional immunology research, discovery, and development through "use cases" centered around the impact of nutrition on the gut microbiome and immune responses. Our systems nutritional immunology analyses, which include modeling and informatics methodologies in combination with pre-clinical and clinical studies, have the potential to discover emerging systems-wide properties at the interface of the immune system, nutrition, microbiome, and metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: big data; complex systems; computational modeling; informatics; nutrition; nutritional immunology; systems biology
Year: 2016 PMID: 26909350 PMCID: PMC4754447 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2016.00005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Systems-wide interactions between nutrition, immune system, microbiome, and metabolism.
Figure 2Network topology of model illustrating mucosal responses to inflammatory bowel disease with novel therapeutic targets in the in-view. Systems biology markup language (SBML) compliant network of interactions between commensal and foreign bacteria on the cellular immune components is created using CellDesigner.1 The bigger panel in the figure represents the different compartments of the gut that includes the lumen, epithelium, lamina propria, and mesenteric lymph node. The red and the green objects represent foreign bacteria and commensal bacteria, respectively, found inside the lumen of the gut. The stacked column bar graph depicts the relative abundances and distribution of the various microbial communities present inside the gut. The imbalance between the red (foreign bacteria) and green (commensal bacteria) objects represents the dysbiosis inside the lumen in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The dysbiosis in the lumen causes the activation of inflammatory cytokines (shown by green arrows) in the lamina propria. The three in-view of the molecules represents the modeling-enabled discovery of lanthionine synthetase cyclase-like 2 (LANCL2), nod-like receptor-X1 (NLRX1), and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPAR γ) that are the targets for therapeutic intervention for treatment of IBD. The rectangular in-view represents the complex intracellular signaling pathways and transcriptional factors controlling T cell network (124).
1http://www.celldesigner.org/