Background
Following the recruitment of Professor Charlie Hodgman to the Chair in Bioinformatics and Systems Biology early in 2004, the University of Nottingham invested £0.77m in establishing this multidisciplinary centre. MyCIB staff were recruited over an 18-month period and have made a major contribution during the first two years of activity. Major research and training activities have been initiated and collaborations now exist with a range of academic and industrial research organisations around the world.

This is the very impressive MyCIB wall-hanging that was constructed by Jane Hodgman
and this represents an abstract representation of Systems Biology. This is found in our corridor, so all our visitors see this as they enter our centre.
Multidisciplinary
This emerging science demands a new approach to teaching and research. The classical divisions within academic research are too restrictive. Integrative Biology spans many disciplines, taking tools and ideas from mathematics, computing, medicine, chemistry and from many areas of the biological sciences. MyCIB was formed to be a bridge between these different groups, fostering cross disciplinary collaborations to enable us to explore this new frontier.
The Integrative Biology Concept
Integrative biology advances our understanding of biological phenomena through the close collaborative efforts of laboratory and theoretical scientists, who develop mechanistic mathematical models that identify gaps in biological knowledge and propose hypotheses for laboratory testing. The laboratory results lead iteratively to refined models that have predictive value, such as the interactions between diet and health, or improving drug efficacy while minimizing adverse reactions. The modelling integrates phenomena at different physical scales or incorporates different branches of physics (e.g. biochemical thermo-dynamics, with fluid dynamics and materials science). The approach is analogous to that between experimental and theoretical physicists.
Some of the most advanced mathematical modelling carried out so far has been by the Virtual Heart project. See also the Physiome project for details of other related projects.
Developing Data Standards
One potential barrier to collaborative research is the lack of common standards for the computational representation of data. One of our aims will be to contribute to the development of data standards to facilitate the sharing of data, models, and analytical methods.
Achievements
Nottingham has received BBSRC/EPSRC funding for a Centre for Plant Integrative Biology, whose computing activities
fall within the MyCIB infrastructure. CPIB's initial aim is to develop multiscale models of Arabidopsis root growth.
MyCIB has recieved funding for a TSB project in collaboration with GSK, UCB, NPL and LGC Ltd.
CPIB has a link project with Syngenta headed by Professor Charlie Hodgman and Professor Graham Seymour.
MyCIB has project links with both Unilever and Masterfoods.
MyCIB established the first MSc course in Integrative Systems Biology and also delivers a Masters of Research course in Advanced Genomics and Proteomic Sciences here at the University of Nottingham.
The University of Nottingham