| Literature DB >> 26348403 |
Yingxia Wen1, Liqun Han1, Giuseppe Palladino1, Annette Ferrari1, Yuhong Xie1, Andrea Carfi1, Philip R Dormitzer1, Ethan C Settembre2.
Abstract
Influenza vaccines are the primary intervention for reducing the substantial health burden from pandemic and seasonal influenza. Hemagglutinin (HA) is the most important influenza vaccine antigen. Subunit and split influenza vaccines are formulated, released for clinical use, and tested for stability based on an in vitro potency assay, single-radial immunodiffusion (SRID), which selectively detects HA that is immunologically active (capable of eliciting neutralizing or hemagglutination inhibiting antibodies in an immunized subject). The time consuming generation of strain-specific sheep antisera and calibrated antigen standards for SRID can delay vaccine release. The limitation in generating SRID reagents was evident during the early days of the 2009 pandemic, prompting efforts to develop more practical, alternative, quantitative assays for immunologically active HA. Here we demonstrate that, under native conditions, trypsin selectively digests HA produced from egg or mammalian cell in monovalent vaccines that is altered by stress conditions such as reduced pH, elevated temperature, or deamidation, leaving native, pre-fusion HA, intact. Subsequent reverse-phase high pressure liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC) can separate trypsin-resistant HA from the digested HA. Integration of the resulting RP-HPLC peak yields HA quantities that match well the values obtained by SRID. Therefore, trypsin digestion, to pre-select immunologically active HA, followed by quantification by RP-HPLC is a promising alternative in vitro potency assay for influenza vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: Hemagglutinin; Influenza; Potency; Reversed-phase high pressure liquid chromatography; Trypsinization; Vaccine
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26348403 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2015.08.077
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641