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Recalling the Future: Immunological Memory Toward Unpredictable Influenza Viruses

期刊

FRONTIERS IN IMMUNOLOGY
卷 10, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01400

关键词

T cells; B cells; influenza; immunological memory; vaccine

资金

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) [1071916]
  2. NHMRC [1102792, 1103367]
  3. University of Melbourne
  4. Australian Government Department of Health
  5. CSC-UoM joint scholarship from The University of Melbourne
  6. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1102792, 1103367] Funding Source: NHMRC

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Persistent and durable immunological memory forms the basis of any successful vaccination protocol. Generation of pre-existing memory B cell and T cell pools is thus the key for maintaining protective immunity to seasonal, pandemic and avian influenza viruses. Long-lived antibody secreting cells (ASCs) are responsible for maintaining antibody levels in peripheral blood. Generated with CD4(+) T help after naive B cell precursors encounter their cognate antigen, the linked processes of differentiation (including Ig class switching) and proliferation also give rise to memory B cells, which then can change rapidly to ASC status after subsequent influenza encounters. Given that influenza viruses evolve rapidly as a consequence of antibody-driven mutational change (antigenic drift), the current influenza vaccines need to be reformulated frequently and annual vaccination is recommended. Without that process of regular renewal, they provide little protection against drifted (particularly H3N2) variants and are mainly ineffective when a novel pandemic (2009 A/H1N1 swine flu) strain suddenly emerges. Such limitation of antibody-mediated protection might be circumvented, at least in part, by adding a novel vaccine component that promotes cross-reactive CD8(+) T cells specific for conserved viral peptides, presented by widely distributed HLA types. Such memory cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) can rapidly be recalled to CTL effector status. Here, we review how B cells and follicular T cells are elicited following influenza vaccination and how they survive into a long-term memory. We describe how CD8(+) CTL memory is established following influenza virus infection, and how a robust CTL recall response can lead to more rapid virus elimination by destroying virus-infected cells, and recovery. Exploiting long-term, cross-reactive CTL against the continuously evolving and unpredictable influenza viruses provides a possible mechanism for preventing a disastrous pandemic comparable to the 1918-1919 H1N1 Spanish flu, which killed more than 50 million people worldwide.

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