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2.
J Mol Biol ; 435(13): 168113, 2023 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37080423

ABSTRACT

Vaccines are among the greatest tools for prevention and control of disease. They have eliminated smallpox from the planet, decreased morbidity and mortality for major infectious diseases like polio, measles, mumps, and rubella, significantly blunted the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, and prevented viral induced cancers such as cervical cancer caused by human papillomavirus. Recent technological advances, in genomics, structural biology, and human immunology have transformed vaccine development, enabling new technologies such as mRNA vaccines to greatly accelerate development of new and improved vaccines. In this review, we briefly highlight the history of vaccine development, and provide examples of where advances in genomics and structural biology, paved the way for development of vaccines for bacterial and viral diseases.


Subject(s)
Molecular Biology , Viral Vaccines , Virus Diseases , Humans , COVID-19/prevention & control , Molecular Biology/history , Molecular Biology/trends , Pandemics , Virus Diseases/history , Virus Diseases/prevention & control , Viral Vaccines/history
3.
Front Immunol ; 12: 690470, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34777332

ABSTRACT

Vaccination to prevent infectious disease is one of the most successful public health interventions ever developed. And yet, variability in individual vaccine effectiveness suggests that a better mechanistic understanding of vaccine-induced immune responses could improve vaccine design and efficacy. We have previously shown that protective antibody levels could be elicited in a subset of recipients with only a single dose of the hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccine and that a wide range of antibody levels were elicited after three doses. The immune mechanisms responsible for this vaccine response variability is unclear. Using single cell RNA sequencing of sorted innate immune cell subsets, we identified two distinct myeloid dendritic cell subsets (NDRG1-expressing mDC2 and CDKN1C-expressing mDC4), the ratio of which at baseline (pre-vaccination) correlated with the immune response to a single dose of HBV vaccine. Our results suggest that the participants in our vaccine study were in one of two different dendritic cell dispositional states at baseline - an NDRG2-mDC2 state in which the vaccine elicited an antibody response after a single immunization or a CDKN1C-mDC4 state in which the vaccine required two or three doses for induction of antibody responses. To explore this correlation further, genes expressed in these mDC subsets were used for feature selection prior to the construction of predictive models using supervised canonical correlation machine learning. The resulting models showed an improved correlation with serum antibody titers in response to full vaccination. Taken together, these results suggest that the propensity of circulating dendritic cells toward either activation or suppression, their "dispositional endotype" at pre-vaccination baseline, could dictate response to vaccination.


Subject(s)
Dendritic Cells/immunology , Hepatitis B Antibodies/immunology , Hepatitis B Vaccines/immunology , Hepatitis B/prevention & control , Machine Learning , Single-Cell Analysis , Adult , Aged , Canonical Correlation Analysis , Dendritic Cells/metabolism , Female , Gene Expression Profiling , Hepatitis B/epidemiology , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Single-Cell Analysis/methods , Vaccination , Vaccine Efficacy
4.
Eur J Epidemiol ; 36(7): 753-762, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34117979

ABSTRACT

The Human Immunomics Initiative (HII), a joint project between the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Human Vaccines Project (HVP), focuses on studying immunity and the predictability of immuneresponsiveness to vaccines in aging populations. This paper describes the hypotheses and methodological approaches of this new collaborative initiative. Central to our thinking is the idea that predictors of age-related non-communicable diseases are the same as predictors for infectious diseases like COVID-19 and influenza. Fundamental to our approach is to differentiate between chronological, biological and immune age, and to use existing large-scale population cohorts. The latter provide well-typed phenotypic data on individuals' health status over time, readouts of routine clinical biochemical biomarkers to determine biological age, and bio-banked plasma samples to deep phenotype humoral immune responses as biomarkers of immune age. The first phase of the program involves 1. the exploration of biological age, humoral biomarkers of immune age, and genetics in a large multigenerational cohort, and 2. the subsequent development of models of immunity in relation to health status in a second, prospective cohort of an aging population. In the second phase, vaccine responses and efficacy of licensed COVID-19 vaccines in the presence and absence of influenza-, pneumococcal- and pertussis vaccines routinely offered to elderly, will be studied in older aged participants of prospective population-based cohorts in different geographical locations who will be selected for representing distinct biological and immune ages. The HII research program is aimed at relating vaccine responsiveness to biological and immune age, and identifying aging-related pathways crucial to enhance vaccine effectiveness in aging populations.


Subject(s)
Aging/immunology , COVID-19 Vaccines/immunology , COVID-19/immunology , Adolescent , Adult , Age Factors , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Biomarkers/blood , COVID-19/diagnosis , COVID-19/prevention & control , Clinical Protocols , Female , Health Status , Humans , Immunity, Humoral , Male , Middle Aged , Phenotype , Program Development , Research Design , Young Adult
5.
Vaccines (Basel) ; 9(5)2021 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33922875

ABSTRACT

The role of T cell immunity has been acknowledged in recent vaccine development and evaluation. We tested the humoral and cellular immune responses to Flucelvax®, a quadrivalent inactivated seasonal influenza vaccine containing two influenza A (H1N1 Singapore/GP1908/2015 IVR-180 and H3N2 North Carolina/04/2016) and two influenza B (Iowa/06/2017 and Singapore/INFTT-16-0610/2016) virus strains, using peripheral blood mononuclear cells stimulated by pools of peptides overlapping all the individual influenza viral protein components. Baseline reactivity was detected against all four strains both at the level of CD4 and CD8 responses and targeting different proteins. CD4 T cell reactivity was mostly directed to HA/NA proteins in influenza B strains, and NP/M1/M2/NS1/NEP proteins in the case of the Influenza A strains. CD8 responses to both influenza A and B viruses preferentially targeted the more conserved core viral proteins. Following vaccination, both CD4 and CD8 responses against the various influenza antigens were increased in day 15 to day 91 post vaccination period, and maintained a Th1 polarized profile. Importantly, no vaccine interference was detected, with the increased responses balanced across all four included viral strains for both CD4 and CD8 T cells, and targeting HA and multiple additional viral antigens.

6.
Sci Transl Med ; 13(579)2021 02 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33536277

ABSTRACT

Development of safe and effective COVID-19 vaccines is a global priority and the best hope for ending the COVID-19 pandemic. Remarkably, in less than 1 year, vaccines have been developed and shown to be efficacious and are already being deployed worldwide. Yet, many challenges remain. Immune senescence and comorbidities in aging populations and immune dysregulation in populations living in low-resource settings may impede vaccine effectiveness. Distribution of vaccines among these populations where vaccine access is historically low remains challenging. In this Review, we address these challenges and provide strategies for ensuring that vaccines are developed and deployed for those most vulnerable.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 Vaccines/immunology , COVID-19/immunology , COVID-19/virology , Disease Susceptibility , SARS-CoV-2/physiology , Animals , COVID-19 Vaccines/adverse effects , Disease Models, Animal , Humans , Phylogeny
8.
Front Immunol ; 11: 578801, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33329547

ABSTRACT

Background: Vaccination remains one of the most effective means of reducing the burden of infectious diseases globally. Improving our understanding of the molecular basis for effective vaccine response is of paramount importance if we are to ensure the success of future vaccine development efforts. Methods: We applied cutting edge multi-omics approaches to extensively characterize temporal molecular responses following vaccination with hepatitis B virus (HBV) vaccine. Data were integrated across cellular, epigenomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, and fecal microbiome profiles, and correlated to final HBV antibody titres. Results: Using both an unsupervised molecular-interaction network integration method (NetworkAnalyst) and a data-driven integration approach (DIABLO), we uncovered baseline molecular patterns and pathways associated with more effective vaccine responses to HBV. Biological associations were unravelled, with signalling pathways such as JAK-STAT and interleukin signalling, Toll-like receptor cascades, interferon signalling, and Th17 cell differentiation emerging as important pre-vaccination modulators of response. Conclusion: This study provides further evidence that baseline cellular and molecular characteristics of an individual's immune system influence vaccine responses, and highlights the utility of integrating information across many parallel molecular datasets.


Subject(s)
Genomics , Hepatitis B Vaccines/therapeutic use , Hepatitis B/prevention & control , Immunogenicity, Vaccine , Systems Biology , Vaccination , Adult , Aged , Epigenesis, Genetic , Epigenomics , Feces/microbiology , Female , Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Regulatory Networks , Hepatitis B/genetics , Hepatitis B/metabolism , Hepatitis B/microbiology , Hepatitis B Antibodies/blood , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Protein Interaction Maps , Proteomics , Time Factors , Transcriptome , Treatment Outcome
9.
Front Immunol ; 11: 580373, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33250895

ABSTRACT

Conventional vaccine design has been based on trial-and-error approaches, which have been generally successful. However, there have been some major failures in vaccine development and we still do not have highly effective licensed vaccines for tuberculosis, HIV, respiratory syncytial virus, and other major infections of global significance. Approaches at rational vaccine design have been limited by our understanding of the immune response to vaccination at the molecular level. Tools now exist to undertake in-depth analysis using systems biology approaches, but to be fully realized, studies are required in humans with intensive blood and tissue sampling. Methods that support this intensive sampling need to be developed and validated as feasible. To this end, we describe here a detailed approach that was applied in a study of 15 healthy adults, who were immunized with hepatitis B vaccine. Sampling included ~350 mL of blood, 12 microbiome samples, and lymph node fine needle aspirates obtained over a ~7-month period, enabling comprehensive analysis of the immune response at the molecular level, including single cell and tissue sample analysis. Samples were collected for analysis of immune phenotyping, whole blood and single cell gene expression, proteomics, lipidomics, epigenetics, whole blood response to key immune stimuli, cytokine responses, in vitro T cell responses, antibody repertoire analysis and the microbiome. Data integration was undertaken using different approaches-NetworkAnalyst and DIABLO. Our results demonstrate that such intensive sampling studies are feasible in healthy adults, and data integration tools exist to analyze the vast amount of data generated from a multi-omics systems biology approach. This will provide the basis for a better understanding of vaccine-induced immunity and accelerate future rational vaccine design.


Subject(s)
Hepatitis B Vaccines/immunology , Hepatitis B virus/physiology , Hepatitis B/diagnosis , Monitoring, Immunologic/methods , Vaccination/methods , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Female , Hepatitis B/immunology , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Prospective Studies , Systems Biology , Treatment Outcome
10.
Vaccine ; 38(28): 4484, 2020 06 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32402757
12.
Trends Immunol ; 41(6): 457-465, 2020 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32340868

ABSTRACT

Immune signatures measured at baseline and immediately prior to vaccination may predict the immune response to vaccination. Such pre-vaccine assessment might allow not only population-based, but also more personalized vaccination strategies ('precision vaccination'). If baseline immune signatures are predictive, the underlying mechanism they reflect may also determine vaccination outcome. Thus, baseline signatures might contribute to identifying interventional targets to be modulated prior to vaccination in order to improve vaccination responses. This concept has the potential to transform vaccination strategies and usher in a new approach to improve global health.


Subject(s)
Immunity, Active , Vaccines , Humans , Immunity, Active/immunology , Vaccination/trends , Vaccines/immunology
13.
Vaccine ; 38(28): 4485-4486, 2020 06 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31443989

ABSTRACT

Vaccines are one of the most successful public health interventions in our history resulting in eradication of small pox, near eradication of polio and major reductions in case number and global morbidity and mortality for numerous diseases (Centers for Disease C, 1999) [1]. However, vaccine development has been less successful against complex infectious diseases, where pathogen variability and/or immune evasion mechanisms have combined to pose major obstacles, and have been unsuccessful against non-communicable diseases, including cancer, autoimmunity, allergy, neurodegenerative and metabolic diseases (Koff et al., 2013) [2]. In addition, the current state of vaccine development is an expensive, slow and laborious process, costing billions of dollars, taking decades, with less than a 10% rate of success (Pronker et al., 2013) [3]. While some vaccines, such as the smallpox vaccine approach the gold standard of life-long protection in everyone following a single immunization, other vaccines are less effective, often requiring multiple immunizations, being less effective to populations most susceptible to disease such as infants, the elderly, and those living in the developing world. There is clearly an urgent need to determine ways to improve not just the effectiveness of the vaccines themselves but also the very processes by which they are developed.


Subject(s)
Poliomyelitis , Smallpox Vaccine , Vaccines , Aged , Humans , Immunization , Infant , Vaccination
14.
Ann N Y Acad Sci ; 1462(1): 14-26, 2020 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31659752

ABSTRACT

Vaccines have been incredibly successful at stemming the morbidity and mortality of infectious diseases worldwide. However, there are still no effective vaccines for many serious and potentially preventable infectious diseases. Advances in vaccine technology, including new delivery methods and adjuvants, as well as progress in systems biology and an increased understanding of the human immune system, hold the potential to address these issues. In addition, maternal immunization has opened an avenue to address infectious diseases in neonates and very young infants. This report summarizes the presentations from a 1-day symposium at the New York Academy of Sciences entitled "Innovative Vaccines against Resistant Infectious Diseases and Emerging Threats," held on May 20, 2019.


Subject(s)
Communicable Diseases, Emerging/prevention & control , Congresses as Topic/trends , Research Report/trends , Therapies, Investigational/trends , Vaccines/administration & dosage , Animals , Clinical Trials as Topic/methods , Communicable Disease Control , Communicable Diseases/drug therapy , Communicable Diseases/epidemiology , Communicable Diseases, Emerging/epidemiology , Humans , New York City , Therapies, Investigational/methods
15.
Hum Vaccin Immunother ; 14(9): 2214-2216, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29847214

ABSTRACT

Although the success of vaccination to date has been unprecedented, our inadequate understanding of the details of the human immune response to immunization has resulted in several recent vaccine failures and significant delays in the development of high-need vaccines for global infectious diseases and cancer. Because of the need to better understand the immense complexity of the human immune system, the Human Vaccines Project was launched in 2015 with the mission to decode the human immune response to accelerate development of vaccines and immunotherapies for major diseases. The Project currently has three programs: 1) The Human Immunome Program, with the goal of deciphering the complete repertoire of B and T cell receptors across the human population, termed the Human Immunome, 2) The Rules of Immunogenicity Program, with the goal of understanding the key principles of how a vaccine elicits a protective and durable response using a system immunology approach, and 3) The Universal Influenza Vaccine Initiative (UIVI), with the goal of conducting experimental clinical trials to understand the influence of influenza pre-exposures on subsequent influenza immunization and the mechanisms of protection. Given the dramatic advances in computational and systems biology, genomics, immune monitoring, bioinformatics and machine learning, there is now an unprecedented opportunity to unravel the intricacies of the human immune response to immunization, ushering in a new era in vaccine development.


Subject(s)
Adaptive Immunity , Immune System/physiology , Immunity, Cellular , Immunity, Humoral , Immunity, Innate , Influenza Vaccines/immunology , Influenza Vaccines/isolation & purification , Humans , Systems Biology/trends
16.
Expert Rev Vaccines ; 16(6): 535-544, 2017 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28434256

ABSTRACT

Biomedical research has become a data intensive science in which high throughput experimentation is producing comprehensive data about biological systems at an ever-increasing pace. The Human Vaccines Project is a new public-private partnership, with the goal of accelerating development of improved vaccines and immunotherapies for global infectious diseases and cancers by decoding the human immune system. To achieve its mission, the Project is developing a Bioinformatics Hub as an open-source, multidisciplinary effort with the overarching goal of providing an enabling infrastructure to support the data processing, analysis and knowledge extraction procedures required to translate high throughput, high complexity human immunology research data into biomedical knowledge, to determine the core principles driving specific and durable protective immune responses.


Subject(s)
Computational Biology/methods , Drug Discovery/methods , Vaccines/immunology , Humans
17.
Retrovirology ; 13(1): 81, 2016 Nov 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27871328

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Antigenicity of HIV-1 envelope proteins (Envs) of both lab-adapted and primary isolates expressed on the cell surface rarely match with in vitro neutralization of viruses, pseudo-typed with corresponding Envs. Often, both neutralizing and non-neutralizing antibodies bind to Envs expressed on the cell membrane. This could be due to the lack of efficient cleavage of Env expressed on the cell surface. Naturally occurring, efficiently cleaved Envs with appropriate antigenic properties are relatively rare. Given viral diversity it is essential to increase the pool of candidate Envs suitable for immunogen design. Previously, it has been reported that JRFL Env is the only clade B Env, which is efficiently cleaved on the cell surface and retains desirable antigenic properties. JRCSF is a clade B Env isolated from the same patient as JRFL. JRCSF Env has not been explored aggressively for designing immunogen as the binding characteristics of JRCSF Env to broadly neutralizing antibodies on the cell surface and its cleavage status are unknown. RESULTS: Although JRCSF preferentially binds to most of the other gp120-directed neutralizing antibodies and cleavage dependent antibody, PGT151 efficiently, it binds poorly to CD4-binding-site-directed (CD4-bs-directed) neutralizing antibodies on cell surface. Membrane bound form of modified JRCSF Env containing the N197D mutation binds to CD4-bs-directed neutralizing antibodies better than JRFL, without debilitating its ability to bind quaternary epitope-directed neutralizing antibodies or exposing the CD4i antibody epitopes. In comparison to JRFL (E168K), JRCSF Env binds more efficiently to PG9/PGT145 class of V1/V2-directed conformational antibodies. Biochemical, cell surface staining and gp120 shedding experiments suggest that JRCSF is efficiently cleaved on the cell surface. CONCLUSIONS: Binding of JRCSF Env expressed on cell surface to the various HIV-1 Env-directed antibodies has not been reported earlier. Here, for the first time, we report that compared to JRFL, JRCSF displays epitopes for a larger number of broadly neutralizing antibodies and is also efficiently cleaved when expressed on the cell surface. Thus, considering the diversity of viral Envs and the discovery of conformation dependent glycan-directed antibodies in HIV-1 infected individuals, an innately cleaved JRCSF Env as present on the viral membrane and displaying those distinct epitopes may be an important candidate for immunogen design.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Neutralizing/immunology , Epitopes , HIV Antibodies/immunology , HIV Envelope Protein gp120/immunology , HIV-1/immunology , env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/immunology , HIV Envelope Protein gp120/genetics , HIV-1/genetics , Humans , Protein Binding , Protein Conformation , env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/genetics
18.
Curr Opin HIV AIDS ; 11(6): 601-606, 2016 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27636502

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The purpose is to review recent novel approaches in HIV vaccine research and development being undertaken in the preclinical and early clinical space, as well as related and novel nonvaccine approaches such as genetic delivery of broadly neutralizing antibodies for protection from HIV infection and AIDS. RECENT FINDINGS: We review novel HIV envelope immunogen design, including native trimer and germline targeting approaches as well as genetic delivery of broadly neutralizing antibodies and replicating vector vaccinesSUMMARY: Despite 30+ years of research and development, and billions of dollars spent, a well tolerated and effective HIV vaccine remains a public health priority for any chance of ending the AIDS pandemic. It has become very clear that significant investments in novel technologies, innovation, and multidisciplinary science will be necessary to accelerate progress.


Subject(s)
AIDS Vaccines/immunology , AIDS Vaccines/isolation & purification , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical , HIV Infections/prevention & control , HIV Infections/therapy , Immunotherapy/methods , Biomedical Research/trends , Drug Discovery/trends , Humans
19.
Retrovirology ; 13(1): 41, 2016 06 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27307004

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Broadly neutralizing antibodies to HIV-1 elicited in infected individuals evolves through shifts in their molecular specificities to viral envelope (Env) in the disease course. Recently, we showed that resistance of circulating HIV-1 clade C to the autologous plasma obtained from one Indian elite neutralizer is associated with mutations in V1 loop. In the present study, we examined the genetic attributes associated with exceptional sensitivity of pseudoviruses expressing an env gene obtained from the follow up visit contemporaneous plasma of the same donor. RESULTS: Examination of chimeric autologous Envs, we found that enhanced neutralization sensitivity is associated with mutations in the V3/C3 region. A positive association between V3/C3 mutation mediated enhanced autologous neutralization of autologous viruses with their sensitivity to both neutralizing and non-neutralizing monoclonal antibodies was found. Interestingly, we found that depletion of autologous plasma with trimeric and monomeric Envs conferred the sensitive Env with resistance indicating that mutations in V3/C3 region altered Env conformation towards optimal exposure of epitopes targeted by the neutralizing and non-neutralizing antibodies. CONCLUSION: In summary, we found distinct vulnerabilities associated with evasion of circulating viruses to broadly neutralizing antibodies mounted in an Indian elite neutralizer.


Subject(s)
Antibodies, Neutralizing/immunology , HIV Antibodies/immunology , HIV Envelope Protein gp120/genetics , HIV Infections/immunology , HIV-1/immunology , Mutation , Peptide Fragments/genetics , env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/immunology , Antibodies, Monoclonal/immunology , Antibodies, Neutralizing/blood , Epitopes , HIV Antibodies/blood , HIV Infections/virology , HIV-1/genetics , Humans , Immune Evasion , Neutralization Tests , Plasma/immunology , Plasma/virology , env Gene Products, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/genetics
20.
Science ; 352(6287): 828-33, 2016 May 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27174988

ABSTRACT

The HIV-1 fusion peptide, comprising 15 to 20 hydrophobic residues at the N terminus of the Env-gp41 subunit, is a critical component of the virus-cell entry machinery. Here, we report the identification of a neutralizing antibody, N123-VRC34.01, which targets the fusion peptide and blocks viral entry by inhibiting conformational changes in gp120 and gp41 subunits of Env required for entry. Crystal structures of N123-VRC34.01 liganded to the fusion peptide, and to the full Env trimer, revealed an epitope consisting of the N-terminal eight residues of the gp41 fusion peptide and glycan N88 of gp120, and molecular dynamics showed that the N-terminal portion of the fusion peptide can be solvent-exposed. These results reveal the fusion peptide to be a neutralizing antibody epitope and thus a target for vaccine design.


Subject(s)
AIDS Vaccines/immunology , Antibodies, Neutralizing/chemistry , Antibodies, Viral/chemistry , HIV Envelope Protein gp120/immunology , HIV Envelope Protein gp41/immunology , HIV-1/immunology , Viral Fusion Proteins/immunology , Amino Acid Sequence , Antibodies, Neutralizing/isolation & purification , Antibodies, Neutralizing/ultrastructure , Antibodies, Viral/ultrastructure , B-Lymphocytes/immunology , B-Lymphocytes/virology , Crystallography, X-Ray , Humans , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Immunodominant Epitopes/immunology , Molecular Sequence Data , Peptides/immunology , Protein Conformation , Virus Internalization
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