| Literature DB >> 29943376 |
Vanessa C Harris1,2.
Abstract
Despite unprecedented advances in understanding the intestinal microbiome, its potential to improve fields such as vaccinology has yet to be realized. This review briefly outlines the immunologic potential of the intestinal microbiome for vaccinology and highlights areas where the microbiome holds specific promise in vaccinology. Oral rotavirus vaccine effectiveness in low-income countries is used as a case study to describe how the intestinal microbiome may be employed to improve a vaccine's immunogenicity. A top-down, evidence-based approach is proposed to identify effective microbiota-based applications for vaccine improvement. Applying evidence from field studies in pertinent populations that correlate microbiome composition with vaccine effectiveness to appropriate experimental platforms will lead to the identification of safe, vaccine-supporting microbiota targets that are relevant to populations in need of improvement in vaccine-induced immunity.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29943376 PMCID: PMC6061423 DOI: 10.1007/s40265-018-0941-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drugs ISSN: 0012-6667 Impact factor: 9.546
Known correlations between rotavirus and oral polio vaccine immunogenicity and microbiome composition
| Vaccine | Population | Vaccine response outcome | Commensal microbiota correlation with response, FDR < 0.15, (Phylum) | Commensal microbiota correlation with nonresponse, FDR < 0.15, (Phylum) | Methods | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rotavirus (Rotarix) | India, pre-vaccination 6 weeksa | Seroconversion (anti-RV IgA > 20 IU/mL) | No commensal microbiota correlations | 16S rRNA | [ | |
| Rotavirus (Rotarix) | India, pre-vaccination 6 weeksa | Shedding (RT-PCR) | Higher diversity (#OTU) | 16S rRNA | [ | |
| Rotavirus (Rotarix) | Pakistan, pre-vaccination 6 weeks | Seroconversion (anti-RV IgA > 20 IU/mL) | Higher diversity (Shannon index) | Uncultured | HitChip | [ |
| Rotavirus (Rotarix) | Ghana, pre-vaccination 6 weeks | Seroconversion (anti-RV IgA > 20 IU/mL) | No difference in diversity | HitChip | [ | |
| Polio | India pre-vaccination, 6 weeksa | Type 3 OPV seroconversion | Higher diversity (#OTU) | 16S rRNA | [ | |
| Polio | India pre-vaccination, 6 weeksa | Shedding (RT-PCR, ≥ 1 Sabin strain) | No taxonomic correlations | Higher diversity (#OTU) | 16S rRNA | [ |
| Polio | Bangladesh Composite of 6, 11, 15 week stool | Height of anti-OPV IgG | 16S rRNA | [ |
Pre-vaccination 6-week microbiome composition correlations, unless otherwise indicated
Correlations with an FDR < 0.15 used, unless otherwise indicated. Phylum is indicated in parentheses
Ig immunoglobulin, OPV oral polio vaccine, rRNA ribosomal ribonucleic acid, RT-PCR reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, RV rotavirus
aStudies where microbiota was evaluated at time points other than 6 weeks but not described in the table
bCorrelations that were corroborated when infant microbiota was compared with healthy European infants with assumed high-vaccine immunogenicity
Fig. 1Schematic overview of a top-down approach to identifying microbiota-derived targets for oral vaccines. a Well-conducted studies in appropriate low- and middle-income country settings can identify infants with and without adequate responses to vaccination. b Identification of differences in microbiota composition and community function between responder and nonresponder infants. c Differentially-abundant taxa, gene products, proteins, or metabolites can be tested for alteration of vaccine response and mechanism in appropriate experimental models: murine, gnotobiotic pig, human intestinal enteroid, and adult volunteers. d In parallel, microbiota differences distinguishing adult volunteer vaccine responders and nonresponders can be defined and tested in appropriate experimental models
| The intestinal microbiome holds great promise for the field of vaccinology, but this potential has yet to be realized. |
| Successful development of microbiota-targeted drugs to improve vaccine performance requires a top-down, reductive approach, translationally building on an evidence-base derived from relevant human populations. |