Report on EU-USA workshop: how systems biology can advance cancer research (27 October 2008)

Ruedi Aebersold, Charles Auffray, Erin Baney, Emmanuel Barillot, Alvis Brazma, Catherine Brett, Søren Brunak, Atul Butte, Andrea Califano, Julio Celis, Tanja Cufer, James Ferrell, David Galas, Daniel Gallahan, Robert Gatenby, Albert Goldbeter, Natasa Hace, Adriano Henney, Lee Hood, Ravi IyengarVicky Jackson, Ollie Kallioniemi, Ursula Klingmüller, Patrik Kolar, Walter Kolch, Christina Kyriakopoulou, Frank Laplace, Hans Lehrach, Frederick Marcus, Lynn Matrisian, Garry Nolan, Lucas Pelkmans, Anil Potti, Chris Sander, Marija Seljak, Dinah Singer, Peter Sorger, Hendrik Stunnenberg, Giulio Superti-Furga, Mathias Uhlen, Marc Vidal, John Weinstein, Dennis Wigle, Michael Williams, Olaf Wolkenhauer, Boris Zhivotovsky, Andrei Zinovyev, Blaz Zupan

27 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The main conclusion is that systems biology approaches can indeed advance cancer research, having already proved successful in a very wide variety of cancer-related areas, and are likely to prove superior to many current research strategies. Major points include: Systems biology and computational approaches can make important contributions to research and development in key clinical aspects of cancer and of cancer treatment, and should be developed for understanding and application to diagnosis, biomarkers, cancer progression, drug development and treatment strategies. Development of new measurement technologies is central to successful systems approaches, and should be strongly encouraged. The systems view of disease combined with these new technologies and novel computational tools will over the next 5-20 years lead to medicine that is predictive, personalized, preventive and participatory (P4 medicine).Major initiatives are in progress to gather extremely wide ranges of data for both somatic and germ-line genetic variations, as well as gene, transcript, protein and metabolite expression profiles that are cancer-relevant. Electronic databases and repositories play a central role to store and analyze these data. These resources need to be developed and sustained. Understanding cellular pathways is crucial in cancer research, and these pathways need to be considered in the context of the progression of cancer at various stages. At all stages of cancer progression, major areas require modelling via systems and developmental biology methods including immune system reactions, angiogenesis and tumour progression.A number of mathematical models of an analytical or computational nature have been developed that can give detailed insights into the dynamics of cancer-relevant systems. These models should be further integrated across multiple levels of biological organization in conjunction with analysis of laboratory and clinical data.Biomarkers represent major tools in determining the presence of cancer, its progression and the responses to treatments. There is a need for sets of high-quality annotated clinical samples, enabling comparisons across different diseases and the quantitative simulation of major pathways leading to biomarker development and analysis of drug effects.Education is recognized as a key component in the success of any systems biology programme, especially for applications to cancer research. It is recognized that a balance needs to be found between the need to be interdisciplinary and the necessity of having extensive specialist knowledge in particular areas.A proposal from this workshop is to explore one or more types of cancer over the full scale of their progression, for example glioblastoma or colon cancer. Such an exemplar project would require all the experimental and computational tools available for the generation and analysis of quantitative data over the entire hierarchy of biological information. These tools and approaches could be mobilized to understand, detect and treat cancerous processes and establish methods applicable across a wide range of cancers.
Original languageEnglish
JournalMolecular Oncology
Volume3
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)9-17
Number of pages8
ISSN1574-7891
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2008
Externally publishedYes

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Report on EU-USA workshop: how systems biology can advance cancer research (27 October 2008)'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this