Abstract

Adamantylamide dipeptide (AdDP) is a novel synthetic compound combining the antiviral properties of amantadine and the essential adjuvant activity of immunomodulator muramyl dipeptide. Mice were immunized with influenza A/Taiwan/1/86 (H1N1), A/Sichuan/2/87 (H3N2) and influenza B/Beijing/1/87 subunit vaccines containing AdDP or aluminium hydroxide (A1(OH)3). Induction of homologous haemagglutination-inhibition (H1) antibodies and correlation to protection against lethal aerosol influenza A/PR/8/34 (H1N1) infection were investigated. Subunit vaccine containing A/Sichuan (H3N2) and A1(OH)3 stimulated high H1 antibody titres but failed to provide protection against heterologous influenza A (H1N1) challenge infection following either the primary or the secondary immunizations. In contrast, similar treatment with A/Sichuan subunit vaccine containing AdDP conferred significant protection against heterologous challenge despite low levels of circulating antibody. Primary immunization with even influenza B/Beijing subunit vaccine containing AdDP, but not A1(OH)3, provided partial protection against influenza A challenge. These results suggest that appropriate immunomodulators like AdDP can convert restricted homotypic immunity induced by inactivated influenza subunit vaccines to advantageous cross-reacting type of heterologous response.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call