The research, published today in the journal Cell Host & Microbe, suggests new pathways toward the
Influenza epidemics lead to as many as half a million deaths annually around the world, according to the World Health Organization. While generally effective, vaccines against seasonal influenza must be reformulated every year at great cost based on educated guesses as to which strains of influenza virus will dominate. This dilemma is caused by «antigenic drift»-a phenomenon in which gene mutations constantly alter sites on the virus that can be targeted by antibodies of a vaccinated individual. A true universal influenza vaccine would defeat antigenic drift, improve vaccine efficacy, and eliminate the constant need to reformulate vaccines and revaccinate populations at risk.
«The research in this study provides insights into how we can generate broadly protective immune responses against influenza viruses," Dr. Krammer said. «It shows us mechanisms of protection we didn’t understand, or appreciate, or even know of before. I believe it will have huge implications for the development of a universal influenza virus vaccine.»
A key objective of the study was to understand and assess the protective antibodies that are induced when individuals are vaccinated against pathogenic H7N9 avian influenza viruses, and to characterize the sites on the virus, called epitopes, to which antibodies bind. Mount Sinai scientists, in collaboration with a University of Chicago team led by Dr. Wilson, characterized the binding and functional properties of 12 monoclonal antibodies induced by an experimental vaccine based on
One important result was the identification of unique epitopes on the head and stalk of the virus, which could be important antibody binding sites for future vaccines. But perhaps the most significant result was an enhanced understanding of the protective power of
Today’s influenza vaccines are designed to induce
«We have showed that the assay used every year to prove influenza vaccines are effective can only detect one portion of the antibodies you get after vaccination with avian influenza virus," Dr. Krammer said. «There are a number of other neutralizing and
«Our results suggest that
«The antibodies we characterized in this study are very broad," Dr. Krammer said. «They bind not only to the H7 strain but to H3 and other strains. These results show us that we see only a small part of a bigger picture when we assess vaccine efficacy using today’s most widely accepted assays." The new study suggests tantalizing opportunities for optimizing influenza vaccines and, importantly, also supports the hypothesis behind the universal influenza virus vaccine candidate that the team at Mount Sinai is currently developing.
«Assessing which
Source: http://www.mountsinai.org/about-us/newsroom/press-releases/antibodies-triggered-by-avian-influenza-v...