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International Conference on Mathematical Biology and

Annual Meeting of The Society for Mathematical Biology,

July 27-30, 2009

University of British Columbia, Vancouver

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Program

MSD6Woodward 6;   10:30 am - 12:30 pm, July 28
TitleSystems approaches in immunology - Part II
OrganizerVitaly Ganusov
Los Alamos National Laboratory
AbstractIn the last two decades, we have witnessed a rapidly increasing number
of studies applying methods of mathematical modeling in immunology. In
part, this was due to the development of several quantitative and
powerful techniques of detecting the dynamics of immune responses to
pathogens ex vivo and documenting cell dynamics directly in lymphoid
tissues in vivo. Immune system is a highly complex with many
interacting types of cells and extra-cellular molecules. Understanding
how immune system functions and responds to constant pathogen
challenges will most likely be limited without a comprehensive,
systems approach. There are many different levels at which immune
system operates, and to make a complete picture of the immune system,
we need to understand processes occurring at these different
levels. This mini-symposium is aimed at discussing recent advances in
modeling different immunological phenomena on different scales: from
intracellular processes to organismal level. Four groups of talks
(2 per each) will discuss recent advances in our understanding
sub-cellular, cellular, population, and organismal levels of theoretical
immunology. Talks will on the details of signalling in T cells,
on mechanisms by which magnitude of T cell responses can be controlled,
and on the role of T cells in the control of viral infections such as
TB and HTLV.
Speaker 1Steven Kleinstein
Yale University, USA
Transcriptional cascades during anti-viral responses in human dendritic cells
Speaker 2Francesca Di Rosa
Institute of Molecular Biology and Pathology, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Rome, Italy
Kinetics of in vivo proliferation and death of memory and naive CD8 T cells: parameter estimation based on BromodeoxyUridine (BrdU) incorporation in spleen, lymph nodes and bone marrow
Speaker 3Jophannes Textor
Institute of Theoretical Computer Science, Universität zu Lübeck, Germany
Antigen detection as a distributed randomized search process: A multiscale approach
Speaker 4Simenone Marino
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michiga
A multi-compartmental model of Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection in mice: the role of antigen dose in T cell priming

-- Minisymposium talks are scheduled for 30 min each, including time for questions.