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Cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission

OBJECTIVES: Influenza causes a spectrum of disease from asymptomatic infection to fatal outcome, and pre‐existing immunity can alter susceptibility and disease severity. In a household transmission study, we recruited outpatients with confirmed influenza virus infection and prospectively identified...

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Autores principales: Valkenburg, Sophie A, Fang, Vicky J, Leung, Nancy HL, Chu, Daniel KW, Ip, Dennis KM, Perera, Ranawaka APM, Wang, Yizhuo, Li, Athena PY, Peiris, JS Malik, Cowling, Benjamin J, Poon, Leo LM
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6864499/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31763042
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cti2.1092
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author Valkenburg, Sophie A
Fang, Vicky J
Leung, Nancy HL
Chu, Daniel KW
Ip, Dennis KM
Perera, Ranawaka APM
Wang, Yizhuo
Li, Athena PY
Peiris, JS Malik
Cowling, Benjamin J
Poon, Leo LM
author_facet Valkenburg, Sophie A
Fang, Vicky J
Leung, Nancy HL
Chu, Daniel KW
Ip, Dennis KM
Perera, Ranawaka APM
Wang, Yizhuo
Li, Athena PY
Peiris, JS Malik
Cowling, Benjamin J
Poon, Leo LM
author_sort Valkenburg, Sophie A
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Influenza causes a spectrum of disease from asymptomatic infection to fatal outcome, and pre‐existing immunity can alter susceptibility and disease severity. In a household transmission study, we recruited outpatients with confirmed influenza virus infection and prospectively identified secondary infections in their household contacts, therefore identifying infection cases with baseline samples for determining immune‐mediated protection from influenza infection. METHODS: We examined baseline broadly reactive immune correlates of relevance to universal vaccine development, specifically antibody‐dependent cytotoxic (ADCC) antibodies and T‐cell responses in functional assays. Antibodies were assessed in a cell‐based NK cell degranulation assay by flow cytometry, and T‐cell responses were assessed by IFN‐γ intracellular cytokine staining flow cytometry assay. RESULTS: The magnitude of antibody responses and ADCC function for multiple influenza‐specific proteins was lower in participants who became infected, consolidating the role of pre‐existing antibodies in protection from seasonal influenza virus infection. Among H1N1‐infected contacts, we found that higher levels of pre‐existing H1‐haemagglutinin ADCC responses correlated with reduced symptom severity. Recent infection boosted the titre and magnitude of haemagglutinin‐, neuraminidase‐ and nucleoprotein‐specific ADCC antibodies. Limited T‐cell samples precluded conclusions on the role of pre‐existing T‐cell responses. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, ADCC responses are a protective correlate against influenza virus infection that should be considered in future vaccine development and evaluation. Influenza‐specific ADCC responses are elevated in uninfected subjects, associated with reduced symptoms and boosted by recent infection, whilst HA stem and NA IgG are also elevated in uninfected participants irrespective of ADCC function.
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spelling pubmed-68644992019-11-22 Cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission Valkenburg, Sophie A Fang, Vicky J Leung, Nancy HL Chu, Daniel KW Ip, Dennis KM Perera, Ranawaka APM Wang, Yizhuo Li, Athena PY Peiris, JS Malik Cowling, Benjamin J Poon, Leo LM Clin Transl Immunology Original Article OBJECTIVES: Influenza causes a spectrum of disease from asymptomatic infection to fatal outcome, and pre‐existing immunity can alter susceptibility and disease severity. In a household transmission study, we recruited outpatients with confirmed influenza virus infection and prospectively identified secondary infections in their household contacts, therefore identifying infection cases with baseline samples for determining immune‐mediated protection from influenza infection. METHODS: We examined baseline broadly reactive immune correlates of relevance to universal vaccine development, specifically antibody‐dependent cytotoxic (ADCC) antibodies and T‐cell responses in functional assays. Antibodies were assessed in a cell‐based NK cell degranulation assay by flow cytometry, and T‐cell responses were assessed by IFN‐γ intracellular cytokine staining flow cytometry assay. RESULTS: The magnitude of antibody responses and ADCC function for multiple influenza‐specific proteins was lower in participants who became infected, consolidating the role of pre‐existing antibodies in protection from seasonal influenza virus infection. Among H1N1‐infected contacts, we found that higher levels of pre‐existing H1‐haemagglutinin ADCC responses correlated with reduced symptom severity. Recent infection boosted the titre and magnitude of haemagglutinin‐, neuraminidase‐ and nucleoprotein‐specific ADCC antibodies. Limited T‐cell samples precluded conclusions on the role of pre‐existing T‐cell responses. CONCLUSIONS: Overall, ADCC responses are a protective correlate against influenza virus infection that should be considered in future vaccine development and evaluation. Influenza‐specific ADCC responses are elevated in uninfected subjects, associated with reduced symptoms and boosted by recent infection, whilst HA stem and NA IgG are also elevated in uninfected participants irrespective of ADCC function. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-11-20 /pmc/articles/PMC6864499/ /pubmed/31763042 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cti2.1092 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Clinical & Translational Immunology published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australian and New Zealand Society for Immunology, Inc. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited and is not used for commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Original Article
Valkenburg, Sophie A
Fang, Vicky J
Leung, Nancy HL
Chu, Daniel KW
Ip, Dennis KM
Perera, Ranawaka APM
Wang, Yizhuo
Li, Athena PY
Peiris, JS Malik
Cowling, Benjamin J
Poon, Leo LM
Cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission
title Cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission
title_full Cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission
title_fullStr Cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission
title_full_unstemmed Cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission
title_short Cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission
title_sort cross‐reactive antibody‐dependent cellular cytotoxicity antibodies are increased by recent infection in a household study of influenza transmission
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6864499/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31763042
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/cti2.1092
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