| Literature DB >> 24699472 |
Ying Ju1, Hongxia Fan1, Jun Liu1, Jun Hu1, Xinghui Li1, Changfei Li1, Lizhao Chen1, Qiang Gao2, George F Gao1, Songdong Meng3.
Abstract
The commonly used inactivated or split influenza vaccines induce only induce minimal T cell responses and are less effective in preventing heterologous virus infection. Thus, developing cross-protective influenza vaccines against the spread of a new influenza virus is an important strategy against pandemic emergence. Here we demonstrated that immunization with heat shock protein gp96 as adjuvant led to a dramatic increased antigen-specific T cell response to a pandemic H1N1 split vaccine. Notably, gp96 elicited a cross-protective CD8(+) T cell response to the internal conserved viral protein NP. Although the split pH1N1vaccine alone has low cross-protective efficiency, adding gp96 as an adjuvant effectively improved the cross-protection against challenge with a heterologous virus in mice. Our study reveals the novel property of gp96 in boosting the T cell response against conserved epitopes of influenza virus and its potential use as an adjuvant for human pre-pandemic inactivated influenza vaccines against different viral subtypes.Entities:
Keywords: Conserved epitope; Cross protection; Influenza vaccine; T cell response; gp96
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24699472 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2014.03.045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641