Data Submission Manager La Jolla Institute for Immunology La Jolla, California, United States
Disclosure(s):
Kerstin Westendorf, PhD: No financial relationships to disclose
Introduction/Rationale: ImmuneSpace (immunespace.org) is a freely accessible database that hosts curated human immune-profiling data from a wide range of studies. It was created as the central data repository of the Human Immunology Project Consortium (HIPC), a multi-center NIH-funded program to characterize the diverse states of the human immune system and its regulation, using consistently formatted data [PMID: 23648045]. The overarching goal is to investigate human immune perturbations using state-of-the-art systems-level profiling technologies and innovative methodologies, and to make these data available to the scientific community, accessible for both humans and machines.
Methods: ImmuneSpace hosts data related to immunological exposure, demographics, cytokine profiling, cytometry, and neutralizing antibody assays. It builds on the ImmPort data model, a long-term archive of research and clinical data for the NIH [PMID: 29485622], but implements additional standardization and normalization rules, following the HIPC Data Standards initiative [PMID: 22343568, 26861911, 31272390, 32283555].
Results: ImmuneSpace is continuously updated with data and features. Each study undergoes enhanced curation to ensure consistent use of ontology-based terminology, enabling more efficient queries both within and across studies. Study components stored in different repositories, unparsed raw data, and computationally inaccessible elements are integrated through manual curation, such as study timelines and author-determined 'immune signatures'. Recently, we have added the 'Finder Feature' which simplifies complex searches through a hierarchical, tree-based interface that allows users to visually browse, search with autocomplete, or select entire branches of categorized filters while providing definitions, synonyms, and ontology links.
Conclusion: The HIPC Project and the ImmuneSpace platform demonstrate the feasibility and benefits of a structured approach to representing human immunological studies to elucidate system-level phenomena.