Abstract

A growing body of evidence supports the importance of T cell responses to protect against severe influenza, promote viral clearance, and ensure long-term immunity. Plant-derived virus-like particle (VLP) vaccines bearing influenza hemagglutinin (HA) have been shown to elicit strong humoral and CD4+ T cell responses in both pre-clinical and clinical studies. To better understand the immunogenicity of these vaccines, we tracked the intracellular fate of a model HA (A/California/07/2009 H1N1) in human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) following delivery either as VLPs (H1-VLP) or in soluble form. Compared to exposure to soluble HA, pulsing with VLPs resulted in ~3-fold greater intracellular accumulation of HA at 15 min that was driven by clathrin-mediated and clathrin-independent endocytosis as well as macropinocytosis/phagocytosis. At 45 min, soluble HA had largely disappeared suggesting its handling primarily by high-degradative endosomal pathways. Although the overall fluorescence intensity/cell had declined 25% at 45 min after H1-VLP exposure, the endosomal distribution pattern and degree of aggregation suggested that HA delivered by VLP had entered both high-degradative late and low-degradative static early and/or recycling endosomal pathways. At 45 min in the cells pulsed with VLPs, HA was strongly co-localized with Rab5, Rab7, Rab11, MHC II, and MHC I. High-resolution tandem mass spectrometry identified 115 HA-derived peptides associated with MHC I in the H1-VLP-treated MDMs. These data suggest that HA delivery to antigen-presenting cells on plant-derived VLPs facilitates antigen uptake, endosomal processing, and cross-presentation. These observations may help to explain the broad and cross-reactive immune responses generated by these vaccines.

Highlights

  • The cellular arm of the adaptive immune response is increasingly recognized as important for both recovery and long-term protection from influenza viruses

  • We demonstrated that human monocytederived macrophages (MDMs) internalize H1-virus-like particle (VLP) using both clathrin-mediated and clathrin-independent endocytosis

  • Characterization of influenza HA presented on H1-VLPs and recombinant soluble H1 protein to H1-VLPs was ~4–6-fold greater than in those exposed to the licensed monovalent split virion H1N1 vaccine (Supplementary Fig. 2b), suggesting that recombinant soluble HA and HA from the split virion vaccine display similar monocyte-derived macrophages (MDMs) internalization character

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Summary

Introduction

The cellular arm of the adaptive immune response is increasingly recognized as important for both recovery and long-term protection from influenza viruses. A vaccine that elicits both strong antibody and cell-mediated responses might bring us closer to the control of influenza in the human population

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