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News - updates from:
- People - Interview with Professor Dan Coombs, University of British Columbia (UBC).
- Featured Figure - Kosei Matsuo, Kyushu University.
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Contributing content
Issues of the newsletter are released four times per year in Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter. The newsletter serves the SMB community with news and updates, so please share it with your colleagues and contribute content to future issues.
We welcome submissions to expand the content of the newsletter. The next issue will be released in August, so if you would like to contribute, please send an email to the editors by the start of August 2025 to discuss how your content can be included. This could include summaries of relevant conferences that you have attended, suggestions for interviews, professional development opportunities etc. Please note that job advertisements should be sent to the Member Forum rather than to the newsletter.
If you have any suggestions on how to improve the newsletter and would like to become more involved and/or contribute, please contact us at any time. We appreciate and welcome feedback and ideas from the community. The editors can be reached at newsletter@smb.org.
We hope you enjoy this issue of the newsletter!
Sara, Burcu, Thomas, and Olivia
Editors, SMB Newsletter
News Section
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By Sara Loo
In this issue of the News section, we highlight upcoming conferences and provide updates from the SMB Subgroups and Royal Society Publishing. Read on below.
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Upcoming Conferences
SMB Annual Meeting
The SMB Annual Meeting will be held from July 13-18th, 2025 at the Edmonton Convention Center. Registration is now open! For more information, visit the conference webpage.
SMBE Regional Symposium on Evolutionary Genomics in Agriculture, Environment, Biodiversity conservation and Health for Africa, 2025
The University of Eldoret, Kenya, under the auspices and support of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution (SMBE) will host the SMBE Regional Symposium on Evolutionary Genomics in Agriculture, Environment, Biodiversity conservation and Health 2025, in Eldoret. The main theme of the symposium is: The role of evolutionary genomics in addressing challenges in agriculture and environment in Africa.
Key Dates
Dates of the Symposium: 8th to 11th September, 2025,
Deadline for submitting Abstracts: 7th July, 2025,
Conference registration: 15th August, 2025 https://uoeld.ac.ke/research-and-extension/smbe-regional-symposium-evolutionary-genomics-agriculture-environment
Continuum Mechanics in Biology workshop
A workshop on continuum mechanics in biology will be held at the University of Birmingham, UK, 1-3 July. Event website: https://sites.google.com/view/continuum-mechanics-in-biology/.
The proceedings will feature plenary lectures, contributed talks and posters, and interactive sandpits fostering interdisciplinary collaborations.
All researchers interested in biological applications of continuum mechanics are welcome to attend; PhD students and early career researchers are particularly encouraged to do so. Contributions of short talks and posters are keenly sought.
The link to register (by 8 June) and information about financial support available to students and carers, can be found on the event website.
SMB Subgroups Updates
Mathematical Epidemiology (MEPI)
The Mathematical Epidemiology subgroup, along with the Education subgroup, hosted a virtual mini-symposium May 20-21. We had 3 plenary speakers, 27 contributed talks, and over 130 participants registered.
Additionally, the Mathematical Epidemiology subgroup is now accepting nominations for the position of Co-Chair for the 2025-2026 year. The Co-Chair election will occur prior to the 2025 SMB Annual Meeting. The elected Co-Chair will work with Prashant Kumar Srivastava between July 2025 and June 2026 and will serve as Chair July 2026-June 2027, then as Past Chair from July 2027 through June 2028. The main responsibilities of the Co-Chair are (i) working closely with the chair on organizational and financial matters related to the subgroup, and (ii) facilitating activities of the subgroup. Serving as Co-Chair is an excellent opportunity to get involved with SMB organization and leadership!
Please submit any Co-Chair nominations to Meredith Greer (mgreer@bates.edu) before Thursday, June 5, 2025. Self-nominations are encouraged, and all nominations should include the name, position, and affiliation of the nominee along with a 1-2 paragraph biography of the nominee.
Immunobiology and Infection
The Immunobiology and Infection subgroup is looking forward to this year’s annual meeting! Allof IMMU’s activities can be found at this link. We have exciting talks (throughout) and posters (Monday night) ranging from within-host interactions to population-level transmission. Subjects of focus include Bayesian inference, and agent-based and differential equation models to understand immune responses to vaccines and infections, including cytokine regulation, antibody durability, and T cell repertoire dynamics. Work from our group will report on vaccine optimization, novel therapeutics (immunotherapies), viral rebound, latent infections, and treatment failures. One important and unifying goal of IMMU is to link experimental data to predictive models, often across biological scales, and this will be highlighted throughout IMMU presentations at SMB 2025. Keep a look out for announcements of organized activities (Wednesday afternoon) and a subgroup dinner. Looking forward to seeing members of IMMU and other subgroups in Edmonton this summer!
Mathematical Oncology
MathOnco will conduct its business meeting at the SMB 2025 Annual Meeting from 6-6:45pm on Tuesday July 15th. Following the business meeting, starting at 7pm, the MathOnco subgroup will host a social event for all members. Details will be sent around shortly!
Pharmacometrics
- Jesse Kreger (University of Southern California) has joined Marissa Renardy as co-chair!
- We have started a LinkedIn Group (https://www.linkedin.com/groups/13188488/) and encourage anyone interested to join.
- We will be planning a networking social on the evening of Sunday, July 13 at the annual meeting. We encourage anyone interested to RSVP here so we can get an estimate of the head count: https://forms.gle/vysEeeVb9McZAube7
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Royal Society Publishing
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Proceedings B of the Royal Society has recently published a new special double issue - Uncertainty quantification for healthcare and biological systems (Parts I & II), compiled and edited by Louise M Kimpton, L Mihaela Paun, Mitchel J Colebank and Victoria Volodina and the articles can be accessed directly at https://bit.ly/PTA2292 and Part II here.
A print version is also available at the special price of £40.00 per issue from sales@royalsociety.org.
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People Section
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By Thomas Woolley
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In this newsletter’s People section, we highlight Professor Dan Coombs. He is a mathematical biologist at the University of British Columbia (UBC), where he serves as Head of the Department of Mathematics. His research applies mathematical and computational modelling to problems in immunology, virology, and public health, with work spanning from cellular receptor dynamics to within-host viral infections and population-level epidemic models. He has made significant contributions to the understanding of HIV, cytomegalovirus, and COVID-19, and has collaborated extensively with public health agencies.
Read our interview with Professor Coombs here.
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By Burcu Gürbüz
In this issue, we feature the work of Kosei Matsuo and Yoh Iwasa, Kyushu University:
Modeling Innate Immunity Causing Chronic Inflammation and Tissue Damage
In their 2025 study published in the Bulletin of Mathematical Biology, Matsuo and Iwasa present a mathematical model that explores the dynamics between innate immunity, chronic inflammation, and tissue damage. The model uses a system of differential equations to represent the interactions among four key variables:
1. Pathogen Abundance (z): Represents the concentration of pathogens in the body.
2. Immune Response (w): Denotes the activity level of innate immune cells responding to the pathogen.
3. Inflammation (y): Quantifies the degree of inflammation triggered by the immune response.
4. Tissue Damage (x): Measures the extent of damage inflicted on host tissues due to prolonged inflammation.
The authors propose a simplified dynamical model (Figure (1a)-(1d) below) to capture the essence of innate immune responses.
The study shows that the system can exhibit different behaviors depending on the parameter values: pathogen eradication which indicates the immune system successfully eliminates the pathogen, but inflammation may persist, leading to chronic inflammation; pathogen persistence, i.e. the pathogen remains in the body at a stable level, with ongoing immune response and tissue damage; perpetual oscillation, the system enters a state of continuous fluctuation, with oscillating levels of pathogen abundance, immune response, inflammation, and tissue damage. A key finding is that innate immunity can sometimes eradicate pathogens but leave behind chronic inflammation that can cause ongoing tissue damage. In addition, the model identifies conditions under which the system undergoes transcritical and Hopf bifurcations, leading to qualitative changes in system behavior. The study also examines the role of non-inflammatory activation of the immune response. The authors find that when innate immunity is activated independently of inflammation, pathogens are more efficiently eradicated and the likelihood of oscillatory dynamics is reduced. This study is original in its focus on modeling the interplay between innate immunity and chronic inflammation, areas traditionally less emphasized in mathematical immunology, which often focuses on adaptive immunity. The results provide valuable insights into how innate immune responses can inadvertently contribute to chronic inflammation and tissue damage, highlighting the delicate balance required in immune regulation.
Matsuo and Iwasa’s study provides a detailed understanding of how innate immune responses can inadvertently lead to chronic inflammation and tissue damage. Their mathematical model serves as a fundamental tool for further research aimed at understanding the complexities of immune dynamics and their implications for health and disease.
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Fig. 1 Scheme of the model. Four variables are depicted: pathogen abundance z; immune responses w; inflammation y; and tissue damage x. Arrows indicate interactions between them. Fig. 1 illustrates the interaction between the variables.
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