Abstract

Introduction. Previous priming with avian influenza vaccines results in more rapid and more robust neutralizing antibody responses upon revaccination, but the role CD4+ T cells play in this process is not currently known. Methods. Human subjects previously enrolled in trials of inactivated influenza A(H5N1) vaccines and naive subjects were immunized with an inactivated subunit influenza A/Indonesia/5/05(H5N1) vaccine. Neutralizing antibody responses were measured by a microneutralization assay, and hemagglutinin (HA)-specific and nucleoprotein (NP)-specific CD4+ T-cell responses were quantified using interferon γ enzyme-linked immunosorbent spot assays. Results. While vaccination induced barely detectable CD4+ T-cell responses specific for HA in the previously unprimed group, primed subjects had readily detectable HA-specific memory CD4+ T cells at baseline and mounted a more robust response to HA-specific epitopes after vaccination. There were no differences between groups when conserved NP-specific CD4+ T-cell responses were examined. Interestingly, neutralizing antibody responses following revaccination were significantly higher in individuals who mounted a CD4+ T-cell response to the H5 HA protein, a correlation not observed for NP-specific responses. Conclusions. These findings suggest that prepandemic vaccination results in an enriched population of HA-specific CD4+ T cells that are recruited on rechallenge with a drifted vaccine variant and contribute to more robust and more rapid neutralizing antibody responses.

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