Help Build the Future of Immune Health
Your support helps scientists, educators, and physicians better understand how the human immune system works and how to improve health for everyone.

The immune system affects nearly every aspect of human health, from infections and autoimmune disease to aging and chronic illness. Yet it remains one of the most complex systems in biology. In fact, over 400 immune-related disorders affect over 50M people, creating a $100B burden on the healthcare system in the US alone.
The Digital Twin Innovation Hub brings together researchers, doctors, and educators to build the world’s most advanced technologies and computer models that help us study the immune system as a living, connected whole - not just isolated parts.
Philanthropic support helps us
Create open research tools that scientists around the world can use
Expand the use of these tools to many immune diseases, such as Multiple Sclerosis, Crohn's disease, Type 1 Diabetes.
Train students in next-generation, model-based science
Support collaborative research that translates knowledge into better care
Keep this infrastructure accessible, transparent, and public-serving
The Digital Twin Innovation Hub is pioneering technology that creates digital replicas of the human immune system to help scientists and physicians understand and predict how the body responds to disease. This work has the potential to improve treatments for conditions such as cancer, autoimmune disorders, viral infections, and inflammatory diseases. Philanthropic support helps researchers turn complex medical data into new insights that can improve care and save lives.
Donations supporting the Digital Twin Innovation Hub are administered through the University of Nebraska Foundation, the official philanthropic partner of the University of Nebraska.

Interested in Collaborating Instead?
Your contribution supports work that is long-term, collaborative, and designed for impact beyond any single lab or institution.
DTIH is a nonprofit research initiative. Donations support education, shared research infrastructure, and open scientific collaboration.
