Database Commons
Database Commons

a catalog of worldwide biological databases

Database Profile

The AIR

General information

URL: https://air.bio.informatik.uni-rostock.de
Full name: The Atlas of Inflammation Resolution
Description: Acute inflammation is a nonlinear Spatio-temporal process for the removal of invading pathogens and the repair of damaged tissues. If not resolved, it can lead to chronic inflammatory clinical phenotypes. The Atlas of Inflammation Resolution (AIR) provides a comprehensive resource, covering damage-, and pathogen-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs and PAMPs), relevant signaling events, protein-protein interactions, and gene regulatory mechanisms underlying acute inflammatory clinical phenotypes.
Year founded: 2020
Last update:
Version:
Accessibility:
Accessible
Country/Region: Germany

Classification & Tag

Data type:
Data object:
Database category:
Major species:
Keywords:

Contact information

University/Institution: University of Rostock
Address: 18051, Rostock, Germany
City: Rostock
Province/State:
Country/Region: Germany
Contact name (PI/Team): Olaf Wolkenhauer
Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): olaf.wolkenhauer@uni-rostock.de

Publications

32893032
The Atlas of Inflammation Resolution (AIR). [PMID: 32893032]
Charles N Serhan, Shailendra K Gupta, Mauro Perretti, Catherine Godson, Eoin Brennan, Yongsheng Li, Oliver Soehnlein, Takao Shimizu, Oliver Werz, Valerio Chiurchiù, Angelo Azzi, Marc Dubourdeau, Suchi Smita Gupta, Patrick Schopohl, Matti Hoch, Dragana Gjorgevikj, Faiz M Khan, David Brauer, Anurag Tripathi, Konstantin Cesnulevicius, David Lescheid, Myron Schultz, Eva Särndahl, Dirk Repsilber, Robert Kruse, Angelo Sala, Jesper Z Haeggström, Bruce D Levy, János G Filep, Olaf Wolkenhauer

Acute inflammation is a protective reaction by the immune system in response to invading pathogens or tissue damage. Ideally, the response should be localized, self-limited, and returning to homeostasis. If not resolved, acute inflammation can result in organ pathologies leading to chronic inflammatory phenotypes. Acute inflammation and inflammation resolution are complex coordinated processes, involving a number of cell types, interacting in space and time. The biomolecular complexity and the fact that several biomedical fields are involved, make a multi- and interdisciplinary approach necessary. The Atlas of Inflammation Resolution (AIR) is a web-based resource capturing an essential part of the state-of-the-art in acute inflammation and inflammation resolution research. The AIR provides an interface for users to search thousands of interactions, arranged in inter-connected multi-layers of process diagrams, covering a wide range of clinically relevant phenotypes. By mapping experimental data onto the AIR, it can be used to elucidate drug action as well as molecular mechanisms underlying different disease phenotypes. For the visualization and exploration of information, the AIR uses the Minerva platform, which is a well-established tool for the presentation of disease maps. The molecular details of the AIR are encoded using international standards. The AIR was created as a freely accessible resource, supporting research and education in the fields of acute inflammation and inflammation resolution. The AIR connects research communities, facilitates clinical decision making, and supports research scientists in the formulation and validation of hypotheses. The AIR is accessible through https://air.bio.informatik.uni-rostock.de.

Mol. Aspects Med.. 2020:74() | 112 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)
32873427
The Atlas of Inflammation Resolution (AIR). [PMID: 32873427]
Charles N Serhan, Shailendra K Gupta, Mauro Perretti, Catherine Godson, Eoin Brennan, Yongsheng Li, Oliver Soehnlein, Takao Shimizu, Oliver Werz, Valerio Chiurchiù, Angelo Azzi, Marc Dubourdeau, Suchi Smita Gupta, Patrick Schopohl, Matti Hoch, Dragana Gjorgevikj, Faiz M Khan, David Brauer, Anurag Tripathi, Konstantin Cesnulevicius, David Lescheid, Myron Schultz, Eva Särndahl, Dirk Repsilber, Robert Kruse, Angelo Sala, Jesper Z Haeggström, Bruce D Levy, János G Filep, Olaf Wolkenhauer

Acute inflammation is a protective reaction by the immune system in response to invading pathogens or tissue damage. Ideally, the response should be localized, self-limited, and returning to homeostasis. If not resolved, acute inflammation can result in organ pathologies leading to chronic inflammatory phenotypes. Acute inflammation and inflammation resolution are complex coordinated processes, involving a number of cell types, interacting in space and time. The biomolecular complexity and the fact that several biomedical fields are involved, make a multi- and interdisciplinary approach necessary. The Atlas of Inflammation Resolution (AIR) is a web-based resource capturing an essential part of the state-of-the-art in acute inflammation and inflammation resolution research. The AIR provides an interface for users to search thousands of interactions, arranged in inter-connected multi-layers of process diagrams, covering a wide range of clinically relevant phenotypes. By mapping experimental data onto the AIR, it can be used to elucidate drug action as well as molecular mechanisms underlying different disease phenotypes. For the visualization and exploration of information, the AIR uses the Minerva platform, which is a well-established tool for the presentation of disease maps. The molecular details of the AIR are encoded using international standards. The AIR was created as a freely accessible resource, supporting research and education in the fields of acute inflammation and inflammation resolution. The AIR connects research communities, facilitates clinical decision making, and supports research scientists in the formulation and validation of hypotheses. The AIR is accessible through https://air.bio.informatik.uni-rostock.de.

Mol. Aspects Med.. 2020:() | 0 Citations (from Europe PMC, 2025-12-13)

Ranking

All databases:
754/6895 (89.079%)
Interaction:
144/1194 (88.023%)
Pathway:
46/451 (90.022%)
Health and medicine:
189/1738 (89.183%)
Metadata:
73/719 (89.986%)
754
Total Rank
104
Citations
20.8
z-index

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Record metadata

Created on: 2020-11-07
Curated by:
Lin Liu [2021-03-23]
Ming Chen [2020-11-28]
Ming Chen [2020-11-07]