Abstract

Infants are vulnerable to infections owing to a limited ability to mount a humoral immune response and their tolerogenic immune phenotype, which has impeded the success of newborn vaccination. Transplacental transfer of IgG from mother to fetus provides crucial protection in the first weeks of life, and maternal immunization has recently been implemented as a public health strategy to protect newborns against serious infections. Despite their early success, current maternal vaccines do not provide comparable protection across pregnancies with varying gestational lengths and placental and maternal immune features, and they do not account for the dynamic interplay between the maternal immune response and placental transfer. Moreover, progress toward the rational design of maternal vaccines has been hindered by inadequacies of existing experimental models and safety challenges of investigating longitudinal dynamics of IgG transfer in pregnant humans. Alternatively, in silico mechanistic models are a logical framework to disentangle the processes regulating placental antibody transfer. This Review synthesizes current literature through a mechanistic modeling lens to identify placental and maternal regulators of antibody transfer, their clinical covariates, and knowledge gaps to guide future research. We also describe opportunities to use integrated modeling and experimental approaches toward the rational design of vaccines against existing and emerging neonatal pathogen threats.

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