4.5 Article

Heterosubtypic immunity to influenza mediated by liposome adjuvanted H5N1 recombinant protein vaccines

Journal

VACCINE
Volume 28, Issue 41, Pages 6765-6777

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.07.065

Keywords

Influenza; Influenza vaccine; RT-PCR; Nucleoprotein (NP); M2 protein; H5N1; H1N1; Liposome; Immunization; Intramuscular; Mice; Immune response; Cytokines; Cytotoxic lymphocytes; Heterosubtypic immunity

Funding

  1. Commission on Higher Education, Ministry of Education [2549, 11]
  2. National Science and Technology Development Agency (NSTDA), Ministry of Science Technology, Thailand
  3. Thailand Research Fund (TRF)
  4. NSR

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A non-egg, non-culture based influenza vaccine that intervenes large influenza outbreaks and protects against heterosubtypic infections is needed. Candidates of such vaccine are likely to be conserved influenza virus proteins or their coding DNA. The vaccine must be conveniently produced at reasonable cost, safe, highly immunogenic and should be able to recall rapidly the immunological memory upon the antigenic re-exposure. In this study vaccines made of full length recombinant NP and M2 of the H5N1 influenza A virus were entrapped either alone or together into liposome (L) made of phosphatidylcholine and cholesterol. The vaccines (L-NP, L-M2 or L-NP + M2) and mocks (L or PBS) were safe without causing any adverse reaction in the intramuscularly injected mice. They were readily immunogenic at a single dose and a recalled response could be detected within one day post booster. Cytokine and antibody data indicated that the vaccines induced a Th1 bias immune response. NP containing vaccines stimulated a marked increase of cytotoxic lymphocytes, i.e., CD8(+), intracellular IFN gamma(+) cells, while M2 containing vaccines elicited good antibody response which neutralized infectivity of heterologous influenza viruses. Although the three vaccines elicited different immunological defense factors; nevertheless, they similarly and readily abrogated lung histopathology mediated by viruses belonging to different H5N1 clade/subclade and heterosubtypes including swine H1N1 and human H1N1/2009 viruses. They protected the vaccinated mice against lethal challenges with mouse adapted avian H5N1 virus. The liposome adjuvanted vaccines which demonstrated high protective efficacy in mice warrant testing further in a non-rodent model as well as in humans. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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