| Literature DB >> 29556492 |
Nicola Luigi Bragazzi1, Vincenza Gianfredi2, Milena Villarini3, Roberto Rosselli4, Ahmed Nasr5, Amr Hussein6, Mariano Martini7, Masoud Behzadifar8.
Abstract
Vaccines are public health interventions aimed at preventing infections-related mortality, morbidity, and disability. While vaccines have been successfully designed for those infectious diseases preventable by preexisting neutralizing specific antibodies, for other communicable diseases, additional immunological mechanisms should be elicited to achieve a full protection. "New vaccines" are particularly urgent in the nowadays society, in which economic growth, globalization, and immigration are leading to the emergence/reemergence of old and new infectious agents at the animal-human interface. Conventional vaccinology (the so-called "vaccinology 1.0") was officially born in 1796 thanks to the contribution of Edward Jenner. Entering the twenty-first century, vaccinology has shifted from a classical discipline in which serendipity and the Pasteurian principle of the three Is (isolate, inactivate, and inject) played a major role to a science, characterized by a rational design and plan ("vaccinology 3.0"). This shift has been possible thanks to Big Data, characterized by different dimensions, such as high volume, velocity, and variety of data. Big Data sources include new cutting-edge, high-throughput technologies, electronic registries, social media, and social networks, among others. The current mini-review aims at exploring the potential roles as well as pitfalls and challenges of Big Data in shaping the future vaccinology, moving toward a tailored and personalized vaccine design and administration.Entities:
Keywords: Big Data; Web 2.0; eHealth; history of vaccinology; omics disciplines; vaccine
Year: 2018 PMID: 29556492 PMCID: PMC5845111 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2018.00062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
The different genomic/post-genomic specialties and their potential role in the field of vaccinology.
| Genomic/post-genomic specialty potentially relevant in vaccinology | Definition |
|---|---|
| Genomics | Systematic, genome-wide investigation of genes |
| Proteomics | Systematic, proteome-wide investigation of proteins |
| Transcriptomics | Systematic, transcriptome-wide investigation of gene transcription |
| Metabolomics | Systematic, metabolome-wide investigation of metabolites |
| Cytomics | Systematic, cytome-wide investigation of biochemical/biophysical events at a single cell level |
| Immunogenomics | Systematic, immunogenome-wide investigation of immunologically relevant genes |
| Immunoproteomics | Systematic, immunoproteome-wide investigation of immunologically relevant proteins |
| Immunometabolomics | Systematic, immunometabolome-wide investigation of immunologically relevant metabolites |
| Interactomics | Systematic, interactome-wide investigation of interactions among proteins and/or other cellular molecules/components |
| Secretomics | Systematic, secretome-wide investigation of all secreted proteins of a given cell/tissue/organism |
| Exoproteomics | Systematic, exoproteome-wide investigation of proteins in the extra-cellular proximity of a biological system |
| Surfomics | Systematic, surfome-wide investigation of surface proteins and other components, such as surface-exposed moieties |
| Immunomics | Systematic, immunome-wide investigation of immune system dynamics, regulation and response to a given pathogen |
| Protectomics | Systematic, protectome-wide investigation of the structural/functional protein motifs that confer immunological protection |
| Adversomics | Systematic, adversome-wide investigation of potential vaccine-related adverse events |
| Vaccinomics | Systematic, comprehensive integration of previously described omics disciplines for advancing vaccine discovery and development, as well as personalized vaccinology |
Potential applications of Big Data in the different subfields of vaccinology.
| Subfield of vaccinology | Examples of applications |
|---|---|
| Vaccine discovery and development | Structural/functional vaccinologySystems vaccinology |
| Vaccine production and safety | Monitors and sensors |
| Vaccine campaigns | Evidence-based prevention and evidence-based vaccinology |
| Vaccine efficacy and effectiveness | Vaccine trials |
| Vaccine side effects | Vaccine adverse event reporting system (VAERS) |
| Vaccine literacy/vaccine hesitancy | Digital epidemiology/infodemiology and infoveillance |
Figure 1The roles of Big Data in vaccination: from vaccine discovery and development (omics technologies and wet-lab approaches) to vaccination campaign and vaccine safety monitoring (electronic registries, social media/networks, and digital epidemiology).