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Explore a curated selection of the latest publications from the Immuno-Pathology Network.
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Browse recent publications from network members.
Key areas of research are understanding how tumour-autonomous features (tumour genetics/epigenetics and metabolism) and the microbiome modify the immune microenvironment in solid malignancies.
The COVID-19 pandemic and the re-emergence of specific pathogens and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) underline the critical importance of infectious disease research.
Key research areas include autoimmunity, complement, macrophage biology, tumour immunology, vascular inflammation, skin immunology, vaccine responses and renal pathology.
Immunology at the Crick covers a broad variety of topics ranging from basic molecular processes controlling immune cell activation to translational research into novel diagnostics and treatments for infectious and autoimmune diseases.
Research into the interactions between vasculature and both humoral and cellular components of the immune system is of central importance to inflammatory pathophysiology understanding.
Groups focused on immunogenetics at the Wellcome Sanger Institute use a range of high-throughput assays such as genome sequencing, RNA sequencing (bulk and single cell) and ATAC-seq to understand cell-cell interactions, map genetic variants to functional cellular effects, determine the biological basis of human disease and identify new drug targets.
The Immuno-Pathology Network will bring together immunologists, clinicians, bioengineers and data scientists to evaluate the impact of the immune system and immune-focused therapies in improving lung health.
The Immuno-Pathology Network will enable CNS researchers to more easily harness the knowledge and expertise of those working on innate immune biology to further our understanding of how innate immunity drives neurodegeneration.
The Department of Bioengineering integrates engineering sciences with biomedical research and clinical practice. Research focuses on the diagnosis and treatment of cancer, autoimmune/inflammatory diseases and infectious diseases.
The Department of Chemistry undertakes research across the full range of modern chemical science, including several areas with direct relevance to immunology, inflammation and infection.
Digestive diseases researchers at Imperial are exploring liver failure and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).
The Department of Computing has research themes of Artificial Intelligence, Data Science, Programming Languages, Security, Software Engineering, Systems, Theory & Algorithms, Analysis & Verification, and Computer Vision.