1. Heads, stalks and everything else: how can antibodies eradicate influenza as a human disease?
- Author
-
Neu KE, Henry Dunand CJ, and Wilson PC
- Subjects
- Antibodies, Neutralizing immunology, Antibodies, Viral immunology, B-Lymphocytes virology, Hemagglutinin Glycoproteins, Influenza Virus metabolism, Humans, Immunodominant Epitopes metabolism, Influenza, Human prevention & control, Vaccination, B-Lymphocytes immunology, Immunologic Memory, Influenza A virus immunology, Influenza Vaccines immunology, Influenza, Human immunology
- Abstract
Current seasonal influenza virus vaccines are effective against infection but they have to be reformulated on a regular basis to counter antigenic variations. The majority of the antibodies induced in response to seasonal vaccination are strain-specific. However, antibodies targeting conserved epitopes on the hemagglutinin protein have been identified and they offer broad protection. Most of these antibodies bind the hemagglutinin stalk domain and are generated from preexisting memory B cells. Broadly protective stalk-biased responses induced by antigenically divergent influenza strains, in concert with prior immunity, are sufficient to eradicate seasonally circulating strains. Future vaccine trials should aim to harness and maintain such a response with the realistic goal of developing a universal influenza vaccine., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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