Abstract

After the influenza H1N1 pandemic of 2009, the seasonal A/Brisbane/59/2007 strain was replaced by the A/California/07/2009 strain for the influenza virus vaccine composition. After several seasons with no indications on the occurrence of antigenic drift, A/Michigan/45/2015 was chosen as the H1N1 vaccine strain for the 2017/2018 season. Since the immune response to influenza is shaped by the history of exposure to antigenically similar strains, the potential cross-protection between seasonal human influenza vaccine strains and the emerging pandemic strains was investigated. Human serum samples were tested by hemagglutination inhibition and single radial hemolysis assays against A/Brisbane/59/2007, A/California/07/2009, and A/Michigan/45/2015 strains. Strong cross-reactions between A/California/07/2009 and A/Michigan/45/2015 strains were observed in 2009/2010, most likely induced by the start of the 2009 pandemic, and the subsequent post-pandemic seasons from 2010/2011 onward when A/California/07/2009 became the predominant strain. In the 2014/2015 season, population immunity against A/California/07/2009 and A/Michigan/45/2015 strains increased again, associated with strong cross-reactions. Whereas hemagglutination inhibition assay has a higher sensitivity for detection of new seasonal drift, the single radial hemolysis assay is an excellent tool for determining the presence of pre-existing immunity, allowing a potential prediction on the booster potential of influenza vaccines against newly emerging drifted strains.

Highlights

  • The immune response to influenza is shaped by the individual history of exposure to related antigens

  • The results by hemagglutination inhibition (HI) and single radial hemolysis (SRH) assays against human influenza H1N1 vaccine strains

  • This study provided a serologically-based evaluation and interpretation of the levels of crossreactive antibodies against H1N1 viruses circulating in the human population since 2008

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Summary

Introduction

The immune response to influenza is shaped by the individual history of exposure to related antigens. The new virus (A/California/07/2009 H1N1pdm09) was the result of a triple reassortment from human, swine, and Eurasian avian influenza viruses and affected mostly children and young adults [1,2] This could be due to the similarity of the H1N1 pdm strain to the viruses circulating in humans between the 1930s and 1950s, suggesting that adults, in particular those over 60 years old, could have some cross-reactive antibody responses against the pandemic virus [3,4,5,6], as proven by several studies [3,4,7,8,9,10,11].

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