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1.
J Infect Dis ; 224(3): 469-480, 2021 08 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33090202

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Preexisting antibodies to influenza, shaped by early infection and subsequent exposures, may impact responses to influenza vaccination. METHODS: We enrolled 72 children (aged 7-17 years) in 2015-2016; all received inactivated influenza vaccines. Forty-one were also vaccinated in 2014-2015, with 12 becoming infected with A(H3N2) in 2014-2015. Thirty-one children did not have documented influenza exposures in the prior 5 seasons. Sera were collected pre- and postvaccination in both seasons. We constructed antibody landscapes using hemagglutination inhibition antibody titers against 16 A(H3N2) viruses representative of major antigenic clusters that circulated between 1968 and 2015. RESULTS: The breadth of the antibody landscapes increased with age. Vaccine-induced antibody responses correlated with boosting of titers to previously encountered antigens. Postvaccination titers were the highest against vaccine antigens rather than the historic A(H3N2) viruses previously encountered. Prevaccination titers to the vaccine were the strongest predictors of postvaccination titers. Responses to vaccine antigens did not differ by likely priming virus. Influenza A(H3N2)-infected children in 2014-2015 had narrower antibody landscapes than those uninfected, but prior season infection status had little effect on antibody landscapes following 2015-2016 vaccination. CONCLUSIONS: A(H3N2) antibody landscapes in children were largely determined by age-related immune priming, rather than recent vaccination or infection.


Subject(s)
Influenza Vaccines , Influenza, Human , Antibodies, Viral , Child , Humans , Influenza A Virus, H3N2 Subtype/immunology , Influenza, Human/prevention & control , Vaccination , Vaccines, Inactivated
2.
J Immunol ; 201(8): 2354-2368, 2018 10 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30209189

ABSTRACT

Clinical and experimental observations suggest that chronic lung disease is linked to respiratory viral infection. However, the long-term aspect of this relationship is not yet defined using a virus that replicates at properly high levels in humans and a corresponding animal model. In this study, we show that influenza A virus infection achieves 1 × 106-fold increases in viral load in the lung and dose-dependent severity of acute illness in mice. Moreover, these events are followed by persistence of negative- and positive-strand viral RNA remnants for 15 wk and chronic lung disease for at least 26 wk postinfection. The disease is manifested by focal areas of bronchiolization and mucus production that contain increased levels of viral RNA remnants along with mucin Muc5ac and Il13 mRNA compared with uninvolved areas of the lung. Excess mucus production and associated airway hyperreactivity (but not fibrosis or emphysema) are partially attenuated with loss of IL-13 production or signaling (using mice with IL-13 or STAT6 deficiency). These deficiencies cause reciprocal increases in l17a mRNA and neutrophils in the lung; however, none of these disease endpoints are changed with IL-13/IL-17a compared with IL-13 deficiency or STAT6/IL-17a compared with STAT6 deficiency. The results establish the capacity of a potent human respiratory virus to produce chronic lung disease focally at sites of active viral RNA remnants, likely reflecting locations of viral replication that reprogram the region. Viral dose dependency of disease also implicates high-level viral replication and severity of acute infection as determinants of chronic lung diseases such as asthma and COPD with IL-13-dependent and IL-13/IL-17-independent mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Bronchi/pathology , Influenza A virus/physiology , Influenza, Human/immunology , Lung Diseases/immunology , Lung/physiology , Orthomyxoviridae Infections/immunology , RNA, Viral/genetics , Animals , Bronchial Hyperreactivity , Cells, Cultured , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Interleukin-13/genetics , Interleukin-13/metabolism , Interleukin-17/genetics , Interleukin-17/metabolism , Lung/virology , Metaplasia , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Mucin 5AC/metabolism , STAT6 Transcription Factor/genetics , STAT6 Transcription Factor/metabolism , Viral Load
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