Intranasal vaccination with a replication-deficient influenza virus induces heterosubtypic neutralising mucosal IgA antibodies in humans

A Morokutti, T Muster, B Ferko - Vaccine, 2014 - Elsevier
A Morokutti, T Muster, B Ferko
Vaccine, 2014Elsevier
We investigated the cross-neutralising potential of serum and nasal wash samples from
volunteers who were intranasally immunised once with a monovalent replication-deficient
delNS1-H1N1 influenza virus vaccine (7.7 log 10 TCID 50/volunteer). Eight out of twelve
(8/12) vaccinees responded to vaccination with a significant increase of antibody levels in
serum IgG ELISA, mucosal IgA ELISA, MNA or HAI. Four responders showed delNS1-
specific ELISA IgA increases and revealed excellent homosubtypic neutralising activity in …
Abstract
We investigated the cross-neutralising potential of serum and nasal wash samples from volunteers who were intranasally immunised once with a monovalent replication-deficient delNS1-H1N1 influenza virus vaccine (7.7 log10 TCID50/volunteer). Eight out of twelve (8/12) vaccinees responded to vaccination with a significant increase of antibody levels in serum IgG ELISA, mucosal IgA ELISA, MNA or HAI. Four responders showed delNS1-specific ELISA IgA increases and revealed excellent homosubtypic neutralising activity in serum and mucosal washings (4/4). However, 0/4 of the sera but 3/4 of the nasal washings neutralised also heterosubtypic H3N2 and H5N1 influenza viruses. Depletion experiments proved that IgA but not IgG is responsible for the cross-neutralising activity of the nasal wash sample. Our findings indicate that the induction of virus-neutralising IgA may represent a valuable correlate of cross-protection of intranasal influenza vaccines and that the delNS1 concept constitutes a promising approach to protect humans from seasonal and pandemic influenza threats.
Clinical trial registration: NCT00724997.
Elsevier