乙型流感病毒感染后先天免疫反应的延迟影响了雪貂稳健抗体反应的发展。

IF 5.1 1区 生物学 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
mBio Pub Date : 2025-02-05 Epub Date: 2025-01-08 DOI:10.1128/mbio.02361-24
Thomas Rowe, Ashley Fletcher, Melissa Lange, Yasuko Hatta, Gabriela Jasso, David E Wentworth, Ted M Ross
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引用次数: 0

摘要

由于雪貂具有天然的流感易感性、临床症状、传播途径和相似的唾液酸残留分布,因此雪貂是人类流感研究的主要动物模型。人类流感病毒感染雪貂后产生的抗体用于监测抗原漂移和与疫苗病毒和流行毒株的交叉反应。1998年至2019年期间,接种了1500多株人类临床流感分离株的雪貂,导致抗体反应较低(HI)。利用雪貂模型,我们研究了甲型和乙型流感病毒(IAV和IBV)感染后先天性和适应性免疫反应的差异。雪貂感染后产生的抗体用于监测试验,以检测抗原漂移和与疫苗病毒和流行流感毒株的交叉反应性。感染IAV的雪貂产生这些试剂产生较强的抗体反应,而感染IBV产生较弱的抗体反应。在这项使用流感感染雪貂的研究中,我们发现IAV导致干扰素(IFN)的早期激活和促炎反应,而IBV则显示出这些反应的延迟和减少。IAV感染后,雪貂血清中ifn和其他细胞因子或趋化因子水平明显升高。这些先天反应的减少反映了随后血清中IBV抗体反应的延迟和减少。这些发现可能有助于理解乙型流感疫苗接种和感染后人类的低抗体反应,并可能证明使用先天免疫调节剂来克服这些弱反应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Delay of innate immune responses following influenza B virus infection affects the development of a robust antibody response in ferrets.

Due to its natural influenza susceptibility, clinical signs, transmission, and similar sialic acid residue distribution, the ferret is the primary animal model for human influenza research. Antibodies generated following infection of ferrets with human influenza viruses are used in surveillance to detect antigenic drift and cross-reactivity with vaccine viruses and circulating strains. Inoculation of ferrets, with over 1,500 human clinical influenza isolates (1998-2019) resulted in lower antibody responses (HI <1:160) to 86% (387 out of 448) influenza B viruses (IBVs) compared to 2.7% (30 out of 1,094) influenza A viruses (IAVs). Here, we show that the immune responses in ferrets inoculated with IBV were delayed and reduced compared to IAV. Innate gene expression in the upper respiratory tract and blood indicated that IAV generated a strong inflammatory response, including an early activation of the interferon (IFN), whereas IBV elicited a delayed and reduced response. Serum levels of cytokines and IFNs were all much higher following IAV infection than IBV infection. Pro-inflammatory, IFN, TH1/TH2, and T-effector proteins were significantly higher in sera of IAV-infected than IBV-infected ferrets over 28 days following the challenge. Serum levels of Type-I/II/III IFNs were detected following IAV infection throughout this period, whereas Type-III IFN was only late for IBV. An early increase in IFN-lambda corresponded to gene expression following IAV infection. Reduced innate immune responses following IBV infection reflected the subsequent delayed and reduced serum antibodies. These findings may help in understanding the antibody responses in humans following influenza vaccination or infection and consideration of potential addition of innate immunomodulators to overcome low responses.

Importance: The ferret is the primary animal model for human influenza research. Using a ferret model, we studied the differences in both innate and adaptive immune responses following infection with influenza A and B viruses (IAV and IBV). Antibodies generated following infection of ferrets is used for surveillance assays to detect antigenic drift and cross-reactivity with vaccine viruses and circulating influenza strains. IAV infection of ferrets to generate these reagents resulted in a strong antibody response, but IBV infection generated weak antibody responses. In this study using influenza-infected ferrets, we found that IAV resulted in an early activation of the interferon (IFN) and pro-inflammatory response, whereas IBV showed a delay and reduction in these responses. Serum levels of IFNs and other cytokines or chemokines were much higher in ferrets following IAV infection. These reduced innate responses were reflected the subsequent delayed and reduced antibody responses to IBV in the sera. These findings may help in understanding low antibody responses in humans following influenza B vaccination and infection and may warrant the use of innate immunomodulators to overcome these weak responses.

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来源期刊
mBio
mBio MICROBIOLOGY-
CiteScore
10.50
自引率
3.10%
发文量
762
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: mBio® is ASM''s first broad-scope, online-only, open access journal. mBio offers streamlined review and publication of the best research in microbiology and allied fields.
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