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Recombinant Influenza Vaccines: Saviors to Overcome Immunodominance

Nimitha R. Mathew, Davide Angeletti

2020Frontiers in Immunology29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

It has been almost a decade since the 2009 influenza A virus pandemic hit the globe causing significant morbidity and mortality. Nonetheless, annual influenza vaccination, which elicits antibodies mainly against the head region of influenza hemagglutinin (HA), remains as the mainstay to combat and reduce symptoms of influenza infection. Influenza HA is highly antigenically variable, thus limiting vaccine efficacy. In addition, the variable HA head occupies the upper strata of the immunodominance hierarchy, thereby clouding the antibody response toward subdominant epitopes, which are usually conserved across different influenza strains. Isolation of monoclonal antibodies from individuals recognizing such epitopes has facilitated the development of recombinant vaccines that focus the adaptive immune response toward conserved, protective targets. Here, we review some significant leaps in recombinant vaccine development, which could possibly help to overcome B cell and antibody immunodominance and provide heterosubtypic immunity to influenza A virus.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunodominanceVirologyEpitopeHemagglutinin (influenza)VaccinationInfluenza vaccineBiologyInfluenza A virusMonoclonal antibodyVirusOriginal antigenic sinAntibodyImmunologyAntigenic driftInfluenza Virus Research StudiesRespiratory viral infections researchvaccines and immunoinformatics approaches