| Literature DB >> 35025131 |
Roberto Crocchiolo1, Anna Maria Gallina2, Arianna Pani3,4, Daniela Campisi4, Valeria Cento3,4, Nicoletta Sacchi2, Valeria Miotti5, Oscar Matteo Gagliardi6, Federico D'Amico7, Chiara Vismara4, Giorgia Cornacchini1, Giuliana Lando1, Irene Cuppari1, Francesco Scaglione3,4, Silvano Rossini1.
Abstract
The polymorphism of the HLA system has been extensively studied in COVID-19 infection, however there are no data about the role of HLA on vaccine response. We report here the HLA-A, -B, -C, and DRB1 allelic frequencies of n = 111 individuals after BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine, selected on the basis of lower antibody levels (<5% percentile) after the second dose among a total of n = 2569 vaccinees, and compare them with the frequencies of a reference population. We found that differences in the frequencies of the alleles HLA-A*03:01, A*33:03, B*58:01 and at least one haplotype (HLA-A*24:02~C*07:01~B*18:01~DRB1*11:04) are associated with a weaker antibody response after vaccination, together with the age of vaccinees. Our results might suggest a role played by some HLA alleles or haplotypes in antibody production after the BNT162b2 mRNA vaccine, giving insights into the tracking of potentially susceptible individuals across populations. Further studies are needed to better define our exploratory findings and dissect the role of HLA polymorphism on response to anti-COVID-19 vaccines.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; HLA; antibody; mRNA vaccine; spike protein
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35025131 DOI: 10.1111/tan.14546
Source DB: PubMed Journal: HLA ISSN: 2059-2302 Impact factor: 4.513