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Sequential immunization with chimeric hemagglutinin ΔNS1 attenuated influenza vaccines induces broad humoral and cellular immunity.

Raveen RathnasingheLauren A ChangRebecca PearlSonia JangraAmy AspelundAlaura HoagSoner YildizIgnacio MenaWeina SunMadhumathi LoganathanNicholas Alexander CrosslandHans P GertjeAnna Elise TsengSadaf AslamRandy A AlbrechtPeter PaleseFlorian KrammerMichael SchotsaertThomas MusterAdolfo García-Sastre
Published in: NPJ vaccines (2024)
Influenza viruses pose a threat to public health as evidenced by severe morbidity and mortality in humans on a yearly basis. Given the constant changes in the viral glycoproteins owing to antigenic drift, seasonal influenza vaccines need to be updated periodically and effectiveness often drops due to mismatches between vaccine and circulating strains. In addition, seasonal influenza vaccines are not protective against antigenically shifted influenza viruses with pandemic potential. Here, we have developed a highly immunogenic vaccination regimen based on live-attenuated influenza vaccines (LAIVs) comprised of an attenuated virus backbone lacking non-structural protein 1 (ΔNS1), the primary host interferon antagonist of influenza viruses, with chimeric hemagglutinins (cHA) composed of exotic avian head domains with a highly conserved stalk domain, to redirect the humoral response towards the HA stalk. In this study, we showed that cHA-LAIV vaccines induce robust serum and mucosal responses against group 1 stalk and confer antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity activity. Mice that intranasally received cH8/1-ΔNS1 followed by a cH11/1-ΔNS1 heterologous booster had robust humoral responses for influenza A virus group 1 HAs and were protected from seasonal H1N1 influenza virus and heterologous highly pathogenic avian H5N1 lethal challenges. When compared with mice immunized with the standard of care or cold-adapted cHA-LAIV, cHA-ΔNS1 immunized mice had robust antigen-specific CD8 + T-cell responses which also correlated with markedly reduced lung pathology post-challenge. These observations support the development of a trivalent universal influenza vaccine for the protection against group 1 and group 2 influenza A viruses and influenza B viruses.
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