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H1N1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for H1N1 infection and segregates infection versus Pandemrix® vaccination

A high content peptide microarray containing the entire influenza A virus [A/California/08/2009(H1N1)] proteome and haemagglutinin proteins from 12 other influenza A subtypes, including the haemagglutinin from the [A/South Carolina/1/1918(H1N1)] strain, was used to gauge serum IgG epitope signatures...

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Autores principales: Ambati, Aditya, Valentini, Davide, Montomoli, Emanuele, Lapini, Guilia, Biuso, Fabrizio, Wenschuh, Holger, Magalhaes, Isabelle, Maeurer, Markus
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4479535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25639813
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imm.12448
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author Ambati, Aditya
Valentini, Davide
Montomoli, Emanuele
Lapini, Guilia
Biuso, Fabrizio
Wenschuh, Holger
Magalhaes, Isabelle
Maeurer, Markus
author_facet Ambati, Aditya
Valentini, Davide
Montomoli, Emanuele
Lapini, Guilia
Biuso, Fabrizio
Wenschuh, Holger
Magalhaes, Isabelle
Maeurer, Markus
author_sort Ambati, Aditya
collection PubMed
description A high content peptide microarray containing the entire influenza A virus [A/California/08/2009(H1N1)] proteome and haemagglutinin proteins from 12 other influenza A subtypes, including the haemagglutinin from the [A/South Carolina/1/1918(H1N1)] strain, was used to gauge serum IgG epitope signatures before and after Pandemrix® vaccination or H1N1 infection in a Swedish cohort during the pandemic influenza season 2009. A very narrow pattern of pandemic flu-specific IgG epitope recognition was observed in the serum from individuals who later contracted H1N1 infection. Moreover, the pandemic influenza infection generated IgG reactivity to two adjacent epitopes of the neuraminidase protein. The differential serum IgG recognition was focused on haemagglutinin 1 (H1) and restricted to classical antigenic sites (Cb) in both the vaccinated controls and individuals with flu infections. We further identified a novel epitope VEPGDKITFEATGNL on the Ca antigenic site (251–265) of the pandemic flu haemagglutinin, which was exclusively recognized in serum from individuals with previous vaccinations and never in serum from individuals with H1N1 infection (confirmed by RNA PCR analysis from nasal swabs). This epitope was mapped to the receptor-binding domain of the influenza haemagglutinin and could serve as a correlate of immune protection in the context of pandemic flu. The study shows that unbiased epitope mapping using peptide microarray technology leads to the identification of biologically and clinically relevant target structures. Most significantly an H1N1 infection induced a different footprint of IgG epitope recognition patterns compared with the pandemic H1N1 vaccine.
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spelling pubmed-44795352016-07-01 H1N1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for H1N1 infection and segregates infection versus Pandemrix® vaccination Ambati, Aditya Valentini, Davide Montomoli, Emanuele Lapini, Guilia Biuso, Fabrizio Wenschuh, Holger Magalhaes, Isabelle Maeurer, Markus Immunology Original Articles A high content peptide microarray containing the entire influenza A virus [A/California/08/2009(H1N1)] proteome and haemagglutinin proteins from 12 other influenza A subtypes, including the haemagglutinin from the [A/South Carolina/1/1918(H1N1)] strain, was used to gauge serum IgG epitope signatures before and after Pandemrix® vaccination or H1N1 infection in a Swedish cohort during the pandemic influenza season 2009. A very narrow pattern of pandemic flu-specific IgG epitope recognition was observed in the serum from individuals who later contracted H1N1 infection. Moreover, the pandemic influenza infection generated IgG reactivity to two adjacent epitopes of the neuraminidase protein. The differential serum IgG recognition was focused on haemagglutinin 1 (H1) and restricted to classical antigenic sites (Cb) in both the vaccinated controls and individuals with flu infections. We further identified a novel epitope VEPGDKITFEATGNL on the Ca antigenic site (251–265) of the pandemic flu haemagglutinin, which was exclusively recognized in serum from individuals with previous vaccinations and never in serum from individuals with H1N1 infection (confirmed by RNA PCR analysis from nasal swabs). This epitope was mapped to the receptor-binding domain of the influenza haemagglutinin and could serve as a correlate of immune protection in the context of pandemic flu. The study shows that unbiased epitope mapping using peptide microarray technology leads to the identification of biologically and clinically relevant target structures. Most significantly an H1N1 infection induced a different footprint of IgG epitope recognition patterns compared with the pandemic H1N1 vaccine. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd 2015-07 2015-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4479535/ /pubmed/25639813 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imm.12448 Text en © 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd
spellingShingle Original Articles
Ambati, Aditya
Valentini, Davide
Montomoli, Emanuele
Lapini, Guilia
Biuso, Fabrizio
Wenschuh, Holger
Magalhaes, Isabelle
Maeurer, Markus
H1N1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for H1N1 infection and segregates infection versus Pandemrix® vaccination
title H1N1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for H1N1 infection and segregates infection versus Pandemrix® vaccination
title_full H1N1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for H1N1 infection and segregates infection versus Pandemrix® vaccination
title_fullStr H1N1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for H1N1 infection and segregates infection versus Pandemrix® vaccination
title_full_unstemmed H1N1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for H1N1 infection and segregates infection versus Pandemrix® vaccination
title_short H1N1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for H1N1 infection and segregates infection versus Pandemrix® vaccination
title_sort h1n1 viral proteome peptide microarray predicts individuals at risk for h1n1 infection and segregates infection versus pandemrix® vaccination
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4479535/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25639813
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imm.12448
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