| Literature DB >> 30081250 |
Jing Liu1, Zhiguang Ren2, Hongmei Wang3, Yongkun Zhao4, Peter R Wilker5, Zhijun Yu6, Weiyang Sun4, Tiecheng Wang4, Na Feng4, Yuanguo Li4, Hualei Wang4, Xianliang Ji4, Nan Li4, Songtao Yang7, Hongbin He3, Chuan Qin8, Yuwei Gao9, Xianzhu Xia10.
Abstract
Influenza viruses cause significant morbidity and mortality and pose a substantial threat to public health. Vaccination represents the principle means of preventing influenza virus infection. Current vaccine approaches are hindered by the need to routinely reformulate vaccine compositions in an effort to account for the progressive antigenic changes that occur as influenza viruses circulate in the human population. In this study, we evaluated chimeric virus-like particle (cVLP) vaccines containing conserved elements of influenza proteins (HL5M2e (HA stem gene with 5M2e gene inserted) and NP), with or without glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored CCL28 (GPI-CCL28) and/or GM-CSF (GPI-GM-CSF) fusion proteins as molecular adjuvants. cVLPs elicited strong humoral and cellular immune responses against homologous and heterologous viruses, and improved survival following lethal challenge with both homologous and heterologous viruses. Inclusion of GPI-anchored adjuvants in cVLP vaccines augmented the generation of influenza-specific humoral and cellular immune responses in mice in comparison to the non-adjuvanted cVLP vaccines. VLPs containing GPI-anchored adjuvants reduced morbidity and improved survival to lethal challenge with homologous and heterologous influenza viruses. This work suggests that VLP vaccines incorporating conserved influenza virus proteins and GPI-anchored molecular adjuvants may serve as a platform for a broadly protective "universal" influenza vaccine.Entities:
Keywords: Broad-spectrum; GPI-CCL28; GPI-GM-CSF; Influenza cVLPs vaccine; Intranasal administration
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30081250 DOI: 10.1016/j.intimp.2018.07.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Immunopharmacol ISSN: 1567-5769 Impact factor: 4.932