Kilbourne Edwin D, Pokorny Barbara A, Johansson Bert, Brett Ian, Milev Youli, Matthews James T
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York, USA.
J Infect Dis. 2004 Feb 1;189(3):459-61. doi: 10.1086/381123. Epub 2004 Jan 13.
Contemporary influenza vaccines are standardized with respect to their content of hemagglutinin, the major virus antigen. Although the immunizing effect of viral neuraminidase--the less abundant of the 2 major surface glycoproteins--has been well documented in experimental animals, the importance of the purified recombinant protein has not yet been adequately assessed in animals or humans. We demonstrate that different lots of a baculovirus-derived recombinant N2 protein, in the absence of other influenza virus proteins, can induce neuraminidase-specific antibodies, reduce the replication of both homologous and heterovariant virus in mice, and suppress disease, as it is manifested by total body weight loss.