Emory Vaccine Center, Atlanta, GA 30329, USA.
Immunol Rev. 2013 Sep;255(1):243-55. doi: 10.1111/imr.12099.
For more than a century, immunologists and vaccinologists have existed in parallel universes. Immunologists have for long reveled in using 'model antigens', such as chicken egg ovalbumin or nitrophenyl haptens, to study immune responses in model organisms such as mice. Such studies have yielded many seminal insights about the mechanisms of immune regulation, but their relevance to humans has been questioned. In another universe, vaccinologists have relied on human clinical trials to assess vaccine efficacy, but have done little to take advantage of such trials for studying the nature of immune responses to vaccination. The human model provides a nexus between these two universes, and recent studies have begun to use this model to study the molecular profile of innate and adaptive responses to vaccination. Such 'systems vaccinology' studies are beginning to provide mechanistic insights about innate and adaptive immunity in humans. Here, we present an overview of such studies, with particular examples from studies with the yellow fever and the seasonal influenza vaccines. Vaccination with the yellow fever vaccine causes a systemic acute viral infection and thus provides an attractive model to study innate and adaptive responses to a primary viral challenge. Vaccination with the live attenuated influenza vaccine causes a localized acute viral infection in mucosal tissues and induces a recall response, since most vaccinees have had prior exposure to influenza, and thus provides a unique opportunity to study innate and antigen-specific memory responses in mucosal tissues and in the blood. Vaccination with the inactivated influenza vaccine offers a model to study immune responses to an inactivated immunogen. Studies with these and other vaccines are beginning to reunite the estranged fields of immunology and vaccinology, yielding unexpected insights about mechanisms of viral immunity. Vaccines that have been proven to be of immense benefit in saving lives offer us a new fringe benefit: lessons in viral immunology.
一个多世纪以来,免疫学家和疫苗学家一直存在于平行的宇宙中。免疫学家长期以来一直热衷于使用“模式抗原”,如鸡卵卵清蛋白或硝基苯半抗原,来研究模型生物(如小鼠)的免疫反应。这些研究为免疫调节机制提供了许多重要的见解,但它们与人类的相关性一直受到质疑。在另一个宇宙中,疫苗学家依赖于人体临床试验来评估疫苗的疗效,但很少利用这些试验来研究接种疫苗后免疫反应的性质。人体模型提供了这两个宇宙之间的联系,最近的研究已经开始利用该模型来研究接种疫苗后先天和适应性免疫反应的分子特征。这种“系统疫苗学”研究开始为人类先天和适应性免疫提供机制上的见解。在这里,我们介绍了此类研究的概述,并特别介绍了黄热病和季节性流感疫苗的研究实例。接种黄热病疫苗会引起全身性急性病毒感染,因此为研究原发性病毒攻击时的先天和适应性反应提供了一个有吸引力的模型。接种减毒活流感疫苗会在粘膜组织中引起局部急性病毒感染,并引发回忆反应,因为大多数疫苗接种者之前曾接触过流感,因此为研究粘膜组织和血液中的先天和抗原特异性记忆反应提供了独特的机会。接种灭活流感疫苗提供了研究针对灭活免疫原的免疫反应的模型。这些和其他疫苗的研究开始将免疫学和疫苗学这两个疏远的领域重新统一起来,为病毒免疫的机制提供了意想不到的见解。已被证明对拯救生命有巨大益处的疫苗为我们提供了一个新的附加好处:病毒免疫学的经验教训。