1. The Karolinska KI/K COVID-19 immune atlas: An open resource for immunological research and educational purposes
- Author
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Ljunggren, Hans-Gustaf, Ask, Eivind Heggernes, Cornillet, Martin, Strunz, Benedikt, Chen, Puran, Rao Muvva, Jagadeeswara, Akber, Mira, Buggert, Marcus, Chambers, Benedict J., Cuapio Gomez, Angelica, Dzidic, Majda, Filipovic, Iva, Flodström-Tullberg, Malin, Garcia, Marina, Gorin, Jean-Baptiste, Gredmark-Russ, Sara, Hertwig, Laura, Klingström, Jonas, Kokkinou, Efthymia, Kvedaraite, Egle, Lourda, Magda, Mjösberg, Jenny, Maucourant, Christopher, Norrby-Teglund, Anna, Palma Medina, Laura M., Parrot, Tiphaine, Perez-Potti, André, Ponzetta, Andrea, Ringqvist, Emma, Rivera-Ballesteros, Olga, Rooyackers, Olav, Sandberg, Johan K., Sandberg, John Tyler, Sekine, Takuya, Svensson, Mattias, Varnaite, Renata, Wullimann, David, Eriksson, Lars I., Aleman, Soo, Malmberg, Karl-Johan, Strålin, Kristoffer, and Björkström, Niklas K.
- Subjects
Immunology ,General Medicine - Abstract
The Karolinska KI/K COVID-19 Immune Atlas project was conceptualized in March 2020 as a part of the academic research response to the developing SARS-CoV-2 pandemic. The aim was to rapidly provide a curated dataset covering the acute immune response towards SARS-CoV-2 infection in humans, as it occurred during the first wave. The Immune Atlas was built as an open resource for broad research and educational purposes. It contains a presentation of the response evoked by different immune and inflammatory cells in defined naïve patient-groups as they presented with moderate and severe COVID-19 disease. The present Resource Article describes how the Karolinska KI/K COVID-19 Immune Atlas allows scientists, students, and other interested parties to freely explore the nature of the immune response towards human SARS-CoV-2 infection in an online setting.
- Published
- 2022