Rats Go Digital

Computer models of rat physiology will help scientists analyze data from animal experiments.

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Virtual Rats to Help Researchers Study Disease

Most lab rats have to be housed, fed and bred. But not the group Daniel Beard has in mind for his new systems biology center.

They'll be virtual.

Beard, a computational biologist at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, is using computer models of rat physiology to study how genes and environmental factors interact to cause disease. He calls his project the "Virtual Physiological Rat."

The final product won't look much like a rodent—more like integrated data sets on a computer—but it will act like one. That's the beauty of systems biology, an emerging field that integrates computer modeling with lab experiments to learn how entire physiological systems operate in health and disease.

"We are going after the synthesis, or integration, of many working components," Beard explains.

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