| Literature DB >> 26544943 |
Amy W Chung1, Manu P Kumar2, Kelly B Arnold2, Wen Han Yu3, Matthew K Schoen4, Laura J Dunphy2, Todd J Suscovich4, Nicole Frahm5, Caitlyn Linde4, Alison E Mahan4, Michelle Hoffner4, Hendrik Streeck6, Margaret E Ackerman7, M Juliana McElrath5, Hanneke Schuitemaker8, Maria G Pau8, Lindsey R Baden9, Jerome H Kim10, Nelson L Michael11, Dan H Barouch12, Douglas A Lauffenburger13, Galit Alter14.
Abstract
While antibody titers and neutralization are considered the gold standard for the selection of successful vaccines, these parameters are often inadequate predictors of protective immunity. As antibodies mediate an array of extra-neutralizing Fc functions, when neutralization fails to predict protection, investigating Fc-mediated activity may help identify immunological correlates and mechanism(s) of humoral protection. Here, we used an integrative approach termed Systems Serology to analyze relationships among humoral responses elicited in four HIV vaccine trials. Each vaccine regimen induced a unique humoral "Fc fingerprint." Moreover, analysis of case:control data from the first moderately protective HIV vaccine trial, RV144, pointed to mechanistic insights into immune complex composition that may underlie protective immunity to HIV. Thus, multi-dimensional relational comparisons of vaccine humoral fingerprints offer a unique approach for the evaluation and design of novel vaccines against pathogens for which correlates of protection remain elusive.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26544943 PMCID: PMC5490491 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2015.10.027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582