The gut is home to a great number of microbes. The immune system, to protect the body, must discriminate between the pathogenic and non-pathogenic microbes and respond to them in different ways. How the mucosal immune system manages to make this distinction is poorly understood. Here, we explore whether the decision to respond in a certain way to a microorganism is made by single types of cells and molecules or by the collective activity of various kinds of cells and molecules in a given anatomical compartment. We show here that the distinction between pathogenic and non-pathogenic microbes is made by an integrated system rather than by single types of cells or single types of receptors. Since immune recognition is constituted by a complex network of molecular and cellular level interactions, complete understanding of this process requires knowledge of these interactions. However, is it possible to explain immune recognition in molecular and cellular terms if this process is multiple realizable? Indeed, given the number and dynamics of elements involved in the recognition, it is hardly possible that their exact configuration could ever be reproduced even in the same individual. We argue that it is practically impossible to reduce immune recognition to its actual molecular and cellular realization. (This would require making reference to an infinitely long disjunction of lower level processes and each disjunct would be endlessly complex). Instead, the recognition is reducible to the approximation of molecular and cellular level processes. We suggest that the same strategy that was used by us to explain immune recognition in terms of lower level approximations is commonly applied by molecular biologists and systems biologists to explain complex biological processes.

SYSTEMIC FEATURES OF IMMUNE RECOGNITION / B.j. Swiatczak ; supervisor: M. Bedau ; tutor: I. Cohen, M. Rescigno. DIPARTIMENTO DI MEDICINA, CHIRURGIA E ODONTOIATRIA, 2012 Mar 19. 22. ciclo, Anno Accademico 2010. [10.13130/swiatczak-bartlomiej_phd2012-03-19].

SYSTEMIC FEATURES OF IMMUNE RECOGNITION

B.J. Swiatczak
2012

Abstract

The gut is home to a great number of microbes. The immune system, to protect the body, must discriminate between the pathogenic and non-pathogenic microbes and respond to them in different ways. How the mucosal immune system manages to make this distinction is poorly understood. Here, we explore whether the decision to respond in a certain way to a microorganism is made by single types of cells and molecules or by the collective activity of various kinds of cells and molecules in a given anatomical compartment. We show here that the distinction between pathogenic and non-pathogenic microbes is made by an integrated system rather than by single types of cells or single types of receptors. Since immune recognition is constituted by a complex network of molecular and cellular level interactions, complete understanding of this process requires knowledge of these interactions. However, is it possible to explain immune recognition in molecular and cellular terms if this process is multiple realizable? Indeed, given the number and dynamics of elements involved in the recognition, it is hardly possible that their exact configuration could ever be reproduced even in the same individual. We argue that it is practically impossible to reduce immune recognition to its actual molecular and cellular realization. (This would require making reference to an infinitely long disjunction of lower level processes and each disjunct would be endlessly complex). Instead, the recognition is reducible to the approximation of molecular and cellular level processes. We suggest that the same strategy that was used by us to explain immune recognition in terms of lower level approximations is commonly applied by molecular biologists and systems biologists to explain complex biological processes.
19-mar-2012
Settore M-FIL/02 - Logica e Filosofia della Scienza
immune recognition ; reductionism ; systems biology ; idealization ; approximation ; philosophy of immunology
BONIOLO, GIOVANNI
Doctoral Thesis
SYSTEMIC FEATURES OF IMMUNE RECOGNITION / B.j. Swiatczak ; supervisor: M. Bedau ; tutor: I. Cohen, M. Rescigno. DIPARTIMENTO DI MEDICINA, CHIRURGIA E ODONTOIATRIA, 2012 Mar 19. 22. ciclo, Anno Accademico 2010. [10.13130/swiatczak-bartlomiej_phd2012-03-19].
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
phd_unimi_R07404.pdf

Open Access dal 03/02/2015

Tipologia: Tesi di dottorato completa
Dimensione 1.6 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.6 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/173418
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact