About this Research Topic
The field of immunology confronts NAM scientists with specific challenges. Firstly, immunological responses require several cell types in different locations for proper development and take considerable time to develop. Secondly, immunological responses in outbred humans are characterized by genetic and functional variability. Still, the development and application of NAM are increasing rapidly, and the field is moving at such a fast pace that a special issue is timely.
Our goal is to provide an overview of the current state-of-the-art regarding new approach methods or non-animal methods (NAM) in immunology. These should be inspired by the desire to mimic in vivo biology and describe e.g. challenges in mimicking immunological structures (like lymph nodes, bone marrow, local immune structures), immunological responses (systemic and local, innate and adaptive, B cells and T cells) and/or immunological processes (like maturation, trafficking, extravasation, immunotoxicity, affinity maturation).
Animal experiments have many drawbacks, such as high costs, ethical concerns, and questionable relevance for humans.
We invite authors to write original research papers, review papers, or perspective papers on specific issues.
We aim to address issues as broad as, but not limited to:
• The in vitro assessment of chemical immunotoxicity,
• Modeling (parts of) the immune system in vitro and in silico,
• In vitro models for immunological diseases and immune therapy, vaccine development, and testing strategies.
Keywords: NAM, Immunology, challenges in Immunology
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.