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A Recombinant Mosaic HAs Influenza Vaccine Elicits Broad-Spectrum Immune Response and Protection of Influenza a Viruses

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The annual co-circulation of two influenza A subtypes, H1N1 and H3N2, viruses in humans poses significant public health threats worldwide. However, the continuous antigenic drift and shift of influenza viruses limited the effectiveness of current seasonal influenza vaccines, necessitating the development of new vaccines against both seasonal and pandemic viruses. One potential solution to this challenge is to improve inactivated vaccines by including multiple T-cell epitopes. In this study, we designed stabilized trimeric recombinant mosaic HA proteins named HAm, which contain the most potential HA T-cell epitopes of seasonal influenza A virus. We further evaluated the antigenicity, hemagglutinin activity, and structural integrity of HAm and compared its immunogenicity and efficacy to a commercial quadrivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (QIV) in mice. Our results demonstrated that the HAm vaccine was able to induce broadly cross-reactive antibodies and T-cell responses against homologous, heterologous, and heterosubtypic influenza-naive mice. Additionally, the HAm antigens outperformed QIV vaccine antigens by eliciting protective antibodies against panels of antigenically drifted influenza vaccine strains from 2009 to 2024 and protecting against ancestral viruses’ lethal challenge. These results suggest that the HAm vaccine is a promising potential candidate for future universal seasonal and pandemic influenza vaccine development.
Title: A Recombinant Mosaic HAs Influenza Vaccine Elicits Broad-Spectrum Immune Response and Protection of Influenza a Viruses
Description:
The annual co-circulation of two influenza A subtypes, H1N1 and H3N2, viruses in humans poses significant public health threats worldwide.
However, the continuous antigenic drift and shift of influenza viruses limited the effectiveness of current seasonal influenza vaccines, necessitating the development of new vaccines against both seasonal and pandemic viruses.
One potential solution to this challenge is to improve inactivated vaccines by including multiple T-cell epitopes.
In this study, we designed stabilized trimeric recombinant mosaic HA proteins named HAm, which contain the most potential HA T-cell epitopes of seasonal influenza A virus.
We further evaluated the antigenicity, hemagglutinin activity, and structural integrity of HAm and compared its immunogenicity and efficacy to a commercial quadrivalent inactivated influenza vaccine (QIV) in mice.
Our results demonstrated that the HAm vaccine was able to induce broadly cross-reactive antibodies and T-cell responses against homologous, heterologous, and heterosubtypic influenza-naive mice.
Additionally, the HAm antigens outperformed QIV vaccine antigens by eliciting protective antibodies against panels of antigenically drifted influenza vaccine strains from 2009 to 2024 and protecting against ancestral viruses’ lethal challenge.
These results suggest that the HAm vaccine is a promising potential candidate for future universal seasonal and pandemic influenza vaccine development.

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