Contents

Symposium on Immunoinformatics: bioinformatic strategies for better understanding of immune function, held at the Novartis Foundation, London, 8–10 October 2002

Editors: Gregory Bock (Organizer) and Jamie Goode 

This symposium is based on a proposal made by Nikolai Petrovsky and Vladimir Brusic



Hans-Georg Rammensee 
Chair’s introduction

Vladimir Brusic and Nikolai Petrovsky 
Immunoinformatics—the new kid in town
Abstract
Discussion

Nikolai Petrovsky, Diego Silva and Vladimir Brusic 
The future for computational modelling and prediction systems in clinical immunology
Abstract
Discussion

Kamalakar Gulukota 
Immunoinformatics in personalized medicine
Abstract
Discussion

Anne S. De Groot and William Martin 
From immunome to vaccine: epitope mapping and vaccine design tools
Abstract
Discussion

Hanah Margalit and Yael Altuvia 
Insights from MHC-bound peptides
Abstract
Discussion

General discussion I

Darren R Flower, Helen McSparron, Martin J Blythe, Christianna Zygouri, Deborah Taylor, Pingping Guan, Shouzhan Wan, Peter Coveney, Valerie Walshe, Persephone Borrow and Irini A Doytchinova 
Computational vaccinology: quantitative approaches
Abstract
Discussion

Marie-Paule Lefranc 

IMGT, the international ImMunoGeneTics database®, http://imgt.cines.fr
Abstract
Discussion

Stefan Stevanović, Claudia Lemmel, Maik Häntschel and Ute Eberle 
Generating data for databases—the peptide repertoire of HLA molecules
Abstract
Discussion

Steven G. E. Marsh 
HLA nomenclature and the IMGT/HLA Sequence Database
Abstract
Discussion

Christian Schönbach 
From immunogenetics to immunomics: functional prospecting of genes and transcripts 
Abstract
Discussion

Dominik Wodarz 
Mathematical models of HIV and the immune system
Abstract
Discussion

General discussion II

Stephan Beck 
Immunogenomics: towards a digital immune system
Abstract
Discussion

Paul Kellam, Ria Holzerlandt, Eva Gramoustianou, Richard Jenner and Antonia Kwan 
Viral bioinformatics: computational views of host and pathogen
Abstract
Discussion

Final general discussion

Hans-Georg Rammensee 
Closing remarks

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