Abstract

Influenza virus infection is a global public health threat. Current seasonal influenza vaccines are efficacious only when vaccine strains are matched with circulating strains. There is a critical need for developing “universal” vaccines that protect against all influenza viruses. HA stem is a promising target for developing broad-spectrum influenza vaccines due to its relatively conserved feature. However, HA stem is weakly immunogenic when administered alone in a soluble form. Several approaches have been employed to improve the immunogenicity of HA stem, including conjugation of HA stem with a highly immunogenic carrier protein or displaying HA stem on a nanoparticle scaffold. Converting a weakly immunologic protein into a multimer through aggregation can significantly enhance its immunogenicity, with some multimeric protein aggregates previously shown to be more immunogenic than their soluble counterparts in animal models. Here, we show that a chemically coupling a peptide derived from the head domain of PR8 HA (P35) with the poorly immunogenic HA stem protein results in aggregation of the HA stem which significantly increases stem-specific B cell responses following vaccination. Importantly, vaccination with this conjugate in the absence of adjuvant still induced robust B cell responses against stem in vivo. Improving HA stem immunogenicity by aggregation provides an alternative avenue to conjugation with exotic carrier proteins or nanoparticle formulation.

Highlights

  • Seasonal influenza viruses circulate in all geographical regions of the world and cause recurrent disease in humans

  • We showed that conjugation of a short peptide, P35C, improved the immunogenicity of weakly immunogenic HA stem protein in C57BL/6 mice

  • To more definitively confirm that the enhanced immunogenicity is T cell-independent, the immunogenicity of stem and P35C-stem could be compared in TCRdeficient mice in future studies

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Summary

Introduction

Seasonal influenza viruses circulate in all geographical regions of the world and cause recurrent disease in humans. We show that conjugation of HA stem with a short HA head peptide rescues the poor immunogenicity of stem protein. Instead of being a T-helper epitope, P35 conjugation induces the formation of stem aggregates, which significantly enhances stem-specific B cell responses in mice.

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