| Literature DB >> 26560015 |
Anon Srikiatkhachorn1, In-Kyu Yoon2.
Abstract
Dengue virus is the leading cause of vector-borne viral disease with four serotypes in circulation. Vaccine development has been complicated by the potential for both protection and disease enhancement during heterologous infection. Secondary infection triggers cross-reactive immune memory responses that have varying functional and epitope specificities that determine protection or risk. Strongly neutralizing antibodies to quaternary epitopes may be especially important for virus neutralization. Cell-mediated immunity dominated by Th1 functions may also play an important role. Determining an immune correlate of protection or risk would be highly beneficial for vaccine development but is hampered by mechanistic uncertainties and assay limitations. Clinical efficacy trials and human infection models along with a systems approach may provide future opportunities to elucidate such correlates.Entities:
Keywords: Dengue; antibody-dependent enhancement; cell-mediated immunity; correlate of protection; correlate of risk; dengue vaccine; human infection model; humoral immunity; systems immunology; systems vaccinology
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26560015 PMCID: PMC5523864 DOI: 10.1586/14760584.2016.1116949
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Expert Rev Vaccines ISSN: 1476-0584 Impact factor: 5.217