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Association between Hemagglutinin Stem-Reactive Antibodies and Influenza A/H1N1 Virus Infection during the 2009 Pandemic.

Le Nguyen Minh HoaLe Quynh MaiJuliet E BryantPham Quang ThaiNguyen Le Khanh HangNguyen Thi Thu YenTran Nhu DuongDang Dinh ThoangPeter HorbyHeiman F L WerheimAnnette Fox
Published in: Journal of virology (2016)
Universal influenza vaccines could have substantial health and economic benefits. The focus of universal vaccine research has been to induce antibodies that prevent infection by diverse influenza virus strains. These so-called broadly neutralizing antibodies are readily detected in mice and ferrets after infection with a series of distinct influenza virus strains. The 2009 H1N1 pandemic provided an opportunity to investigate whether infection with a novel strain induced broadly neutralizing antibodies in humans. We found that broadly neutralizing antibodies were induced, but levels were low and poorly maintained. This could represent an obstacle for universal vaccine development and warrants further investigation.
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