| Literature DB >> 20508820 |
Michael Schotsaert1, Lorena Itatí Ibañez, Walter Fiers, Xavier Saelens.
Abstract
Influenza is a vaccine preventable disease that causes severe illness and excess mortality in humans. Licensed influenza vaccines induce humoral immunity and protect against strains that antigenically match the major antigenic components of the vaccine, but much less against antigenically diverse influenza strains. A vaccine that protects against different influenza viruses belonging to the same subtype or even against viruses belonging to more than one subtype would be a major advance in our battle against influenza. Heterosubtypic immunity could be obtained by cytotoxic T-cell (CTL) responses against conserved influenza virus epitopes. The molecular mechanisms involved in inducing protective CTL responses are discussed here. We also focus on CTL vaccine design and point to the importance of immune-related databases and immunoinformatics tools in the quest for new vaccine candidates. Some techniques for analysis of T-cell responses are also highlighted, as they allow estimation of cellular immune responses induced by vaccine preparations and can provide correlates of protection.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20508820 PMCID: PMC2875772 DOI: 10.1155/2010/863985
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Figure 1Immunomics comprises the study of immunological processes, thereby integrating new technologies and immunoinformatics tools from which the development of CTL vaccines can benefit. Immunoinformatics allows to collect, analyze, and manage data from research or the clinic into databases. This allows in return to formulate new research hypotheses or the prediction of new vaccine candidates. Promising epitopes are validated as vaccines in experimental set-ups or clinical trials. Hereby vaccines can be used as tools to address fundamental research questions, and immunological analysis can provide means to estimate vaccine efficacy or to determine correlates of protection. The many feed back loops in the system allow optimization of the development process and might ultimately result in a CTL-based vaccine that can induce heterosubtypic immunity against influenza.