| Literature DB >> 32957468 |
Wenqiang Sun1,2, Tingrong Luo2, Wenjun Liu1,2,3,4, Jing Li1,3.
Abstract
Influenza viruses pose a significant threat to human health. They are responsible for a large number of deaths annually and have a serious impact on the global economy. There are numerous influenza virus subtypes, antigenic variations occur continuously, and epidemic trends are difficult to predict-all of which lead to poor outcomes of routine vaccination against targeted strain subtypes. Therefore, the development of universal influenza vaccines still constitutes the ideal strategy for controlling influenza. This article reviews the progress in development of universal vaccines directed against the conserved regions of hemagglutinin (HA), neuraminidase (NA), and other structural proteins of influenza viruses using new technologies and strategies with the goals of enhancing our understanding of universal influenza vaccines and providing a reference for research into the exploitation of natural immunity against influenza viruses.Entities:
Keywords: antigenic variation; cellular immunity; cross-protection; influenza virus; universal vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32957468 PMCID: PMC7551969 DOI: 10.3390/v12091033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Figure 1Mutation frequency of different antigenic regions and surface amino acids in the hemagglutinin (HA) protein of influenza viruses. H1 represents the 3D structure of A/Puerto Rico/8/34 (H1N1) HA protein (PDB ID: 1RU7) on which the location and distribution of different antigenic regions (Ca1, Ca2, Sa, Sb, Cb, and H1C) are indicated. H3 represents the 3D structure of A/X-31 H3 subtype HA protein (PBD ID: 2VIU) illustrating the location and distribution of different antigenic regions (A, B, C, D, and E). B represents the 3D structure of B/Lee/40 B subtype HA protein (PDB ID: 1RFT) highlighting the location and distribution of different antigenic regions (A, B, C, D, and E). H1 abs, H3 abs, and B abs illustrate the mutation frequency of surface amino acids on the respective HA proteins, with their color representing the intensity of mutation frequency based on H1N1 (n = 531, isolated between 1918–2008), H3N2 (n = 968, 1968–2005), and flu B (n = 209, 1940–2007).
Figure 2Phylogenetic tree of HAs of different subtypes (H1–H16) of influenza viruses. The phylogenetic tree was constructed using the neighbor-joining (NJ) method within MEGA software (version 7.0). The colors of the trees are edited using Adobe Illustrator software. The scale bar indicates the average number of amino acid substitutions per site.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of immune responses activated by different types of potential universal influenza vaccines. Universal influenza vaccines developed using different strategies involving different target proteins are administered by subcutaneous, intranasal, and intramuscular routes. The antigen is phagocytosed and processed by macrophages and other APC cells. Subsequently, B cell epitopes form a complex with MHC-II and are presented to the cell surface. Under the combined action of CD4 cells, B cells are activated to differentiate into plasma cells and secrete antibodies—e.g., anti-HA, anti-NA, anti-NP, anti-M2e, and anti-HA stem–to neutralize the virus. T cell epitopes—mainly, NP, M1, and HA stem—form a complex with MHC-I and are presented to the cell surface, under the action of CD8 cells and activate T cells to differentiate into CTLs to kill virus-infected cells.
Advantages and disadvantages of universal influenza vaccines.
| Vaccine Type | Protein Expression System | Protection Ratio | Advantage | Disadvantage | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Homologous | Heterologous | |||||
| HA stem | Eukaryotic expression | Complete protection | Partial protection; Poor protection for different HA groups | Single HA stem can produce extensive protection for the same HA group | Protection is limited by group differences | [ |
| Chimeric HA | Eukaryotic expression or rescue chimeric attenuated virus vaccine | Complete protection | Partial protection; Poor protection for different HA groups | Easy production of chimeric attenuated vaccine | Protection is limited by the type of chimeric subtype and requires multiple immunizations with different chimeric vaccines | [ |
| NA | Eukaryotic expression | Complete protection | Partially protected or unprotected | Strong ability to protect different HA subtype strains of the same NA type | Poor protection against different NA types | [ |
| M1, M2e, NP | Viral vectors, plasmids | Partial protection | Generates different protection according to M1, M2e and NP sequence differences | Wide range of protection without being limited by HA group differences | Not fully protected; Poor immunogenicity requires tandem or combined expression with other proteins | [ |
| Epitope peptide | Chemical synthesis, prokaryotic expression, viral vectors, plasmids | Partial protection | Different protection depending on how much dominant epitope of certain flu covered | Simple, stable, easy to synthesize, non-toxic; not restricted by HA group differences | Difficult to screen for co-conserved epitopes in large influenza databases; Limited by population MHC diversity; Poor immunogenicity | [ |
| Mosaic | Viral vector, eukaryotic expression | Complete protection | Different protection based on the subtype on which the Mosaic design is based | Strong protection and extensive protection for different clades of the same subtype | Difficult to find a sequence that covers all epitopes in the large influenza database | [ |
| Nanoparticles | Gold nanoparticles, polymers, VLPs, liposomes | Different protection according to the type of antigen loaded | Efficiently improve immunogenicity; Load multiple antigens | Complex preparation process | [ | |