4.4 Article

Personalized health and the coronavirus vaccines-Do individual genetics matter?

期刊

BIOESSAYS
卷 43, 期 9, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/bies.202100087

关键词

COVID-19; HLA; human polymorphism; immunogenetics; reactogenicity; vaccines

资金

  1. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities [2U54-MD007600-33]
  2. National Institutes of General Sciences [2R25GM061151-19]

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Vaccines can have variable safety and efficacy due to genetic variability among individuals, leading to different immune responses. The technology and genetic differences in recipients may result in vaccines against COVID-19 triggering distinct immune reactions, potentially signaling a new era of personalized healthcare.
Vaccines represent preventative interventions amenable to immunogenetic prediction of how human variability will influence their safety and efficacy. The genetic polymorphism among individuals within any population can render possible that the immunity elicited by a vaccine is variable in length and strength. The same immune challenge (virus and/or vaccine) could provoke partial, complete or even failed protection for some individuals treated under the same conditions. We review genetic variants and mechanistic relationships among chemokines, chemokine receptors, interleukins, interferons, interferon receptors, toll-like receptors, histocompatibility antigens, various immunoglobulins and major histocompatibility complex antigens. These are the targets for variation among macrophages, dendritic cells, natural killer cells, T- and B-lymphocytes, and complement. The technology platforms (mRNA, viral vectors, proteins) utilized to produce vaccines against SARS-CoV-2 infections may each trigger genetically distinct immune reactogenic profiles. With DNA biobanking and immunoprofiling of recipients, global COVID-19 vaccinations could launch a new era of personalized healthcare.

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