1. Characteristics of RSV-Specific Maternal Antibodies in Plasma of Hospitalized, Acute RSV Patients under Three Months of Age
- Author
-
Jans, Jop, Wicht, Oliver, Widjaja, Ivy, Ahout, Inge M L, de Groot, Ronald, Guichelaar, Teun, Luytjes, Willem, de Jonge, Marien I, de Haan, Cornelis A M, Ferwerda, Gerben, dI&I I&I-1, and dI&I I&I-1
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Pulmonology ,Physiology ,viruses ,Antibody Affinity ,lnfectious Diseases and Global Health Radboud Institute for Molecular Life Sciences [Radboudumc 4] ,lcsh:Medicine ,Disease ,Antibodies, Viral ,Biochemistry ,Severity of Illness Index ,Serology ,Families ,Epitopes ,Antibody Specificity ,Immune Physiology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Enzyme-Linked Immunoassays ,lcsh:Science ,Children ,Antigens, Viral ,Immune System Proteins ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Antibody titer ,Hematology ,respiratory system ,Recombinant Proteins ,Body Fluids ,3. Good health ,Hospitalization ,Chemistry ,Infectious Diseases ,Blood ,Physical Sciences ,Acute Disease ,Female ,Anatomy ,medicine.symptom ,Antibody ,Infants ,Research Article ,Chemical Elements ,Infectious Disease Control ,Immunology ,Respiratory Syncytial Virus Infections ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Tachypnea ,Antibodies ,Blood Plasma ,Virus ,03 medical and health sciences ,Antigen ,Neutralization Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,Avidity ,Immunoassays ,Glycoproteins ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Proteins ,Infant ,Oxygen ,030104 developmental biology ,Age Groups ,Immunoglobulin G ,Respiratory Syncytial Virus, Human ,People and Places ,Respiratory Infections ,Immunologic Techniques ,biology.protein ,Population Groupings ,lcsh:Q ,business - Abstract
Contains fulltext : 170145.pdf (Publisher’s version ) (Open Access) Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is the leading cause for respiratory illness that requires hospitalization in infancy. High levels of maternal antibodies can protect against RSV infection. However, RSV-infected infants can suffer from severe disease symptoms even in the presence of high levels of RSV-specific antibodies. This study analyzes several serological characteristics to explore potential deficiencies or surpluses of antibodies that could relate to severe disease symptoms. We compare serum antibodies from hospitalized patients who suffered severe symptoms as well as uninfected infants. Disease severity markers were oxygen therapy, tachypnea, oxygen saturation, admission to the intensive care unit and duration of hospitalization. Antibodies against RSV G protein and a prefusion F epitope correlated with in vitro neutralization. Avidity of RSV-specific IgG antibodies was lower in RSV-infected infants compared to uninfected controls. Severe disease symptoms were unrelated to RSV-specific IgG antibody titers, avidity of RSV-IgG, virus neutralization capacity or titers against pre- and postfusion F or G protein ectodomains and the prefusion F antigenic site O. In conclusion, the detailed serological characterization did not indicate dysfunctional or epitope-skewed composition of serum antibodies in hospitalized RSV-infected infants suffering from severe disease symptoms. It remains unclear, whether specific antibody fractions could diminish disease symptoms.
- Published
- 2017