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The Center for Human Immunology, Autoimmunity, and Inflammation (CHI) is an exciting initiative of the NIH intramural program begun in 2009. It is uniquely trans-NIH in support (multiple institutes) and leadership (senior scientists from several institutes who donate their time). Its goal is an in-depth assessment of the human immune system using high-throughput multiplex technologies for examination of immune cells and their products, the genome, gene expression, and epigenetic modulation obtained from individuals both before and after interventions, adding information from in-depth clinical phenotyping, and then applying advanced biostatistical and computer modeling methods for mining these diverse data. The aim is to develop a comprehensive picture of the human "immunome" in health and disease, elucidate common pathogenic pathways in various diseases, identify and validate biomarkers that predict disease progression and responses to new interventions, and identify potential targets for new therapeutic modalities. Challenges, opportunities, and progress are detailed. Published 2013. This article is a U.S. Government work and is in the public domain in the USA.

Citation

Howard B Dickler, J Philip McCoy, Robert Nussenblatt, Shira Perl, Pamela A Schwartzberg, John S Tsang, Ena Wang, Neil S Young. The National Institutes of Health Center for Human Immunology, Autoimmunity, and Inflammation: history and progress. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 2013 May;1285:133-47

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PMID: 23692568

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