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Systems biology and big data in asthma and allergy: Recent discoveries and emerging challenges

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-01-09, 00:00 authored by H H F Tang, Peter SlyPeter Sly, P G Holt, K E Holt, M Inouye
Asthma is a common condition caused by immune and respiratory dysfunction, and it is often linked to allergy. A systems perspective may prove helpful in unravelling the complexity of asthma and allergy. Our aim is to give an overview of systems biology approaches used in allergy and asthma research. Specifically, we describe recent “omic”-level findings, and examine how these findings have been systematically integrated to generate further insight.Current research suggests that allergy is driven by genetic and epigenetic factors, in concert with environmental factors such as microbiome and diet, leading to early-life disturbance in immunological development and disruption of balance within key immuno-inflammatory pathways. Variation in inherited susceptibility and exposures causes heterogeneity in manifestations of asthma and other allergic diseases. Machine learning approaches are being used to explore this heterogeneity, and to probe the pathophysiological patterns or “endotypes” that correlate with subphenotypes of asthma and allergy. Mathematical models are being built based on genomic, transcriptomic and proteomic data to predict or discriminate disease phenotypes, and to describe the biomolecular networks behind asthma.The use of systems biology in allergy and asthma research is rapidly growing, and has so far yielded fruitful results. However, the scale and multidisciplinary nature of this research means that it is accompanied by new challenges. Ultimately, it is hoped that systems medicine, with its integration of omics data into clinical practice, can pave the way to more precise, personalised and effective management of asthma.

History

Journal

European Respiratory Journal

Volume

55

Issue

1

Article number

ARTN 1900844

Pagination

1 - 23

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Location

Sheffield, England

ISSN

0903-1936

eISSN

1399-3003

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal