A broad antibody class engages the influenza virus hemagglutinin head at its stem interface.
Holly C SimmonsJoel FinneyRyutaro KotakiYu AdachiAnnie Park MosemanAkiko WatanabeShengli SongLindsey R Robinson-McCarthyValerie Le SageMasayuki KuraokaE Ashley MosemanGarnett KelsoeYoshimasa TakahashiKevin R McCarthyPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Influenza infection and vaccination impart strain-specific immunity that fails to protect against both seasonal antigenic variants and the next pandemic. However, antibodies directed to conserved sites can confer broad protection. We identify and characterize a class of human antibodies that engage a previously undescribed, conserved, epitope on the influenza hemagglutinin protein (HA). Prototype antibody S8V1-157 binds at the normally occluded interface between the HA head and stem. Antibodies to this HA head-stem interface epitope are non-neutralizing in vitro but protect against lethal infection in mice. Their breadth of binding extends across most influenza A serotypes and seasonal human variants. Antibodies to the head-stem interface epitope are present at low frequency in the memory B cell populations of multiple donors. The immunogenicity of the epitope warrants its consideration for inclusion in improved or "universal" influenza vaccines.