High proportions of regulatory B and T cells are associated with decreased cellular responses to pH1N1 influenza vaccine in HIV-infected children and youth (IMPAACT P1088)
Authors
Weinberg, AdrianaMuresan, Petronella
Fenton, Terence
Richardson, Kelly
Dominguez, Teresa
Bloom, Anthony
Petzold, Elizabeth
Anthony, Patricia
Cunningham, Coleen K.
Spector, Stephen A.
Nachman, Sharon
Siberry, George K.
Handelsman, Edward
Flynn, Patricia M.
IMPAACT P1088 study team
UMass Chan Affiliations
UMass Center for Clinical and Translational ScienceDocument Type
Journal ArticlePublication Date
2013-05-01Keywords
HIV infectioncell-mediated immunity
influenza vaccine
regulatory B cells
regulatory T cells
UMCCTS funding
Immunology and Infectious Disease
Infectious Disease
Influenza Humans
Influenza Virus Vaccines
Pediatrics
Translational Medical Research
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
HIV-infected individuals have poor responses to inactivated influenza vaccines. To evaluate the potential role of regulatory T (Treg) and B cells (Breg), we analyzed their correlation with humoral and cell-mediated immune (CMI) responses to pandemic influenza (pH1N1) monovalent vaccine in HIV-infected children and youth. Seventy-four HIV-infected, 4- to 25-y old participants in a 2-dose pH1N1 vaccine study had circulating and pH1N1-stimulated Treg and Breg measured by flow cytometry at baseline, post-dose 1 and post-dose 2. Concomitantly, CMI was measured by ELISPOT and flow cytometry; and antibodies by hemagglutination inhibition (HAI). At baseline, most of the participants had pH1N1-specific IFNgamma ELISPOT responses, whose magnitude positively correlated with the baseline pH1N1, but not with seasonal H1N1 HAI titers. pH1N1-specific IFNgamma ELISPOT responses did not change post-dose 1 and significantly decreased post-dose 2. In contrast, circulating CD4+CD25+% and CD4+FOXP3+% Treg increased after vaccination. The decrease in IFNgamma ELISPOT results was marginally associated with higher pH1N1-specific CD19+FOXP3+ and CD4+TGFbeta+% Breg and Treg, respectively. In contrast, increases in HAI titers post-dose 1 were associated with significantly higher circulating CD19+CD25+% post-dose 1, whereas increases in IFNgamma ELISPOT results post-dose 1 were associated with higher circulating CD4+/C8+CD25+FOXP3+%. In conclusion, in HIV-infected children and youth, influenza-specific Treg and Breg may contribute to poor responses to vaccination. However, robust humoral and CMI responses to vaccination may result in increased circulating Treg and/or Breg, establishing a feed-back mechanism.Source
Hum Vaccin Immunother. 2013 May;9(5):957-68. doi: 10.4161/hv.23774. Epub 2013 Jan 31. Link to article on publisher's site
DOI
10.4161/hv.23774Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/50367PubMed ID
23370281Notes
The UMass Center for Clinical and Translational Science was a participating site for this study: 60323 WNE Maternal Pediatric Adolescent AIDS CTU (Katherine Luzuriaga, MD; Jesica Pagano-Therrien, RN, NP; CTSA Grant: UL1RR031982).
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10.4161/hv.23774