Muyanja Enoch, Ssemaganda Aloysius, Ngauv Pearline, Cubas Rafael, Perrin Helene, Srinivasan Divya, Canderan Glenda, Lawson Benton, Kopycinski Jakub, Graham Amanda S, Rowe Dawne K, Smith Michaela J, Isern Sharon, Michael Scott, Silvestri Guido, Vanderford Thomas H, Castro Erika, Pantaleo Giuseppe, Singer Joel, Gillmour Jill, Kiwanuka Noah, Nanvubya Annet, Schmidt Claudia, Birungi Josephine, Cox Josephine, Haddad Elias K, Kaleebu Pontiano, Fast Patricia, Sekaly Rafick-Pierre, Trautmann Lydie, Gaucher Denis
J Clin Invest. 2014 Jul;124(7):3147-58. doi: 10.1172/JCI75429. Epub 2014 Jun 9.
Defining the parameters that modulate vaccine responses in African populations will be imperative to design effective vaccines for protection against HIV, malaria, tuberculosis, and dengue virus infections. This study aimed to evaluate the contribution of the patient-specific immune microenvironment to the response to the licensed yellow fever vaccine 17D (YF-17D) in an African cohort.
We compared responses to YF-17D in 50 volunteers in Entebbe, Uganda, and 50 volunteers in Lausanne, Switzerland. We measured the CD8+ T cell and B cell responses induced by YF-17D and correlated them with immune parameters analyzed by flow cytometry prior to vaccination.
We showed that YF-17D-induced CD8+ T cell and B cell responses were substantially lower in immunized individuals from Entebbe compared with immunized individuals from Lausanne. The impaired vaccine response in the Entebbe cohort associated with reduced YF-17D replication. Prior to vaccination, we observed higher frequencies of exhausted and activated NK cells, differentiated T and B cell subsets and proinflammatory monocytes, suggesting an activated immune microenvironment in the Entebbe volunteers. Interestingly, activation of CD8+ T cells and B cells as well as proinflammatory monocytes at baseline negatively correlated with YF-17D-neutralizing antibody titers after vaccination. Additionally, memory T and B cell responses in preimmunized volunteers exhibited reduced persistence in the Entebbe cohort but were boosted by a second vaccination.
Together, these results demonstrate that an activated immune microenvironment prior to vaccination impedes efficacy of the YF-17D vaccine in an African cohort and suggest that vaccine regimens may need to be boosted in African populations to achieve efficient immunity.
Registration is not required for observational studies.
This study was funded by Canada's Global Health Research Initiative, Defense Threat Reduction Agency, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and United States Agency for International Development.
确定调节非洲人群疫苗反应的参数对于设计有效疫苗以预防艾滋病毒、疟疾、结核病和登革热病毒感染至关重要。本研究旨在评估非洲队列中患者特异性免疫微环境对已获许可的黄热病疫苗17D(YF-17D)反应的贡献。
我们比较了乌干达恩德培的50名志愿者和瑞士洛桑的50名志愿者对YF-17D的反应。我们测量了YF-17D诱导的CD8+T细胞和B细胞反应,并将它们与接种疫苗前通过流式细胞术分析的免疫参数相关联。
我们发现,与来自洛桑的免疫个体相比,恩德培的免疫个体中YF-17D诱导的CD8+T细胞和B细胞反应显著更低。恩德培队列中疫苗反应受损与YF-17D复制减少有关。在接种疫苗前,我们观察到耗竭和活化的自然杀伤细胞、分化的T和B细胞亚群以及促炎单核细胞的频率更高,这表明恩德培志愿者的免疫微环境被激活。有趣的是,基线时CD8+T细胞、B细胞以及促炎单核细胞的活化与接种疫苗后YF-17D中和抗体滴度呈负相关。此外,预免疫志愿者中的记忆T和B细胞反应在恩德培队列中的持久性降低,但通过第二次接种得到增强。
总之,这些结果表明,接种疫苗前被激活的免疫微环境会阻碍YF-17D疫苗在非洲队列中的效力,并表明可能需要加强非洲人群的疫苗接种方案以实现有效的免疫。
观察性研究无需注册。
本研究由加拿大全球卫生研究倡议、国防威胁降低局、国家过敏和传染病研究所、比尔及梅琳达·盖茨基金会以及美国国际开发署资助。