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Why Glycosylation Matters in Building a Better Flu Vaccine*

期刊

MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
卷 18, 期 12, 页码 2348-2358

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1074/mcp.R119.001491

关键词

Glycoproteomics; glycoprotein structure; viruses; glycoproteins; clinical proteomics; influenza A virus

资金

  1. NIH [U01CA221234]
  2. Graduate Medical Sciences program at Boston University School of Medicine

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Immunodominant influenza A virus (IAV) antigens mutate rapidly, allowing the virus to escape host antibodies. The question remains how to design vaccines that recognize conserved but subdominant IAV antigens for broader immune protection. Glycosylation is a mechanism whereby IAV evades the innate and adaptive immune systems. However, its influence on immunodominance remains poorly understood. Although mass spectrometry methods for identifying glycopeptides are maturing, quantifying glycosylation variation among sets of IAV mutants remains a technical challenge. Low vaccine efficacy against seasonal influenza A virus (IAV) stems from the ability of the virus to evade existing immunity while maintaining fitness. Although most potent neutralizing antibodies bind antigenic sites on the globular head domain of the IAV envelope glycoprotein hemagglutinin (HA), the error-prone IAV polymerase enables rapid evolution of key antigenic sites, resulting in immune escape. Significantly, the appearance of new N-glycosylation consensus sequences (sequons, NXT/NXS, rarely NXC) on the HA globular domain occurs among the more prevalent mutations as an IAV strain undergoes antigenic drift. The appearance of new glycosylation shields underlying amino acid residues from antibody contact, tunes receptor specificity, and balances receptor avidity with virion escape, all of which help maintain viral propagation through seasonal mutations. The World Health Organization selects seasonal vaccine strains based on information from surveillance, laboratory, and clinical observations. Although the genetic sequences are known, mature glycosylated structures of circulating strains are not defined. In this review, we summarize mass spectrometric methods for quantifying site-specific glycosylation in IAV strains and compare the evolution of IAV glycosylation to that of human immunodeficiency virus. We argue that the determination of site-specific glycosylation of IAV glycoproteins would enable development of vaccines that take advantage of glycosylation-dependent mechanisms whereby virus glycoproteins are processed by antigen presenting cells.

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