| Literature DB >> 27242800 |
Abstract
Influenza A virus (IAV) remains a significant global health issue causing annual epidemics, pandemics, and sporadic human infections with highly pathogenic avian or swine influenza viruses. Current inactivated and live vaccines are the mainstay of the public health response to influenza, although vaccine efficacy is lower against antigenically distinct viral strains. The first pandemic of the twenty-first century underlined the urgent need to develop new vaccines capable of protecting against a broad range of influenza strains. Such "universal" influenza vaccines are based on the idea of heterosubtypic immunity, wherein immune responses to epitopes conserved across IAV strains can confer protection against subsequent infection and disease. T-cells recognizing conserved antigens are a key contributor in reducing viral load and limiting disease severity during heterosubtypic infection in animal models. Recent studies undertaken during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic provided key insights into the role of cross-reactive T-cells in mediating heterosubtypic protection in humans. This review focuses on human influenza to discuss the epidemiological observations that underpin cross-protective immunity, the role of T-cells as key players in mediating heterosubtypic immunity including recent data from natural history cohort studies and the ongoing clinical development of T-cell-inducing universal influenza vaccines. The challenges and knowledge gaps for developing vaccines to generate long-lived protective T-cell responses is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: T-cells; correlates of protection; heterosubtypic immunity; influenza; pandemic influenza; universal vaccine
Year: 2016 PMID: 27242800 PMCID: PMC4871858 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2016.00195
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Key human studies of evidence of T-cell-mediated protection against influenza.
| Reference | Study population | Study design | Infecting strain | Cellular responses | Protection against | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IAV infection | Strain | Previous exposure | NtAb negative | CD4 | CD8 | T-cell correlate | Antigenic targets | Infection | Symptom severity | Shedding | Severe disease/mortality | |||
| McMichael et al. ( | Adults | Prospective cohort | Experimental challenge | H1N1 | No | Yes | ND | + | CD8+ cytotoxicity | Epitopes in NP and M1 | No | No | Yes | ND |
| Wilkinson et al. ( | Adults | Prospective cohort | Experimental challenge | sH1N1 and sH3N2 | Yes | Yes | + | − | CD4+IFN-γ+ | NP and M1 | No | Yes | Yes | ND |
| Sridhar et al. ( | Adults seronegative to pH1N1 | Prospective cohort study | Natural community-acquired infection | pH1N1 2009 | No | Yes | No | + | CD8+IFN-γ+IL-2−CD45RA+CCR7− | Conserved epitopes in NP, M1, and PB1 | No | Yes | Yes | ND |
| Hayward et al. ( | Adults and children | Prospective cohort study | Natural community-acquired infection | sH1N1, sH3N2, and pH1N1 2009 | Yes | No | ND | ND | CD3+IFN-γ+ | NP | No | No | Yes | ND |
| Wang et al. ( | Adults hospitalized with H7N9 infection | Hospital-based study | Natural community-acquired infection | H7N9 | – | – | − | + | CD3+CD8+IFN-γ+ | ND | No | No | No | Shorter hospital stay |
ND, not determined.
Universal T-cell vaccine candidates in clinical trials.
| Type of vaccine | Name | Description | Influenza antigens | Adjuvant | Clinical phase | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fusion protein | Multimer-001 | Fusion protein of multiple linear epitopes | HA, NP, and M1 (IAV and IBV) | Montanide ISA 51VG | Phase I | ( |
| Peptide-based | FLU-v | Polypeptide mixture | M1, M2, and NP | ISA-51 | Phase IIa | ( |
| Peptide-based | FP01 | Nanoparticle vaccine of six peptides | Internal conserved proteins | None | Phase I | |
| Viral vector | MVA-NP + M1 | Modified vaccinia Ankara vector | NP + M1 from strain A/Panama/2007/99 | None | Phase IIa | ( |
| Viral vector | ChAdOX1-NP + M1 | Chimpanzee adenovirus | NP + M1 from strain A/Panama/2007/99 | None | Phase I | ( |
| Virus-like particles | VLP using recombinant baculovirus | HA, NA, and M1 | ISCOMATRIX | Phase I | ( |