The differential effect of sub-micron level HA aggregates on influenza potency assays.


Journal

Vaccine
ISSN: 1873-2518
Titre abrégé: Vaccine
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 8406899

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
23 08 2019
Historique:
received: 24 04 2019
revised: 09 07 2019
accepted: 13 07 2019
pubmed: 25 7 2019
medline: 22 9 2020
entrez: 25 7 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Influenza vaccines remain the most effective public health measure for the prevention of influenza-related illnesses. The primary immunogen in inactivated influenza vaccines is hemagglutinin (HA), the receptor binding protein of influenza. The concentration of HA during vaccine production and testing is standardized according to the level of antigen as measured by Single Radial Immunodiffusion Assay (SRID). This allows vaccine potency to be controlled such that individuals receive a dose known to provoke a clinically protective immune response. As compared to alternatives, SRID has the advantage of quantifying immunologically relevant forms of HA, but it depends on timely generation of novel reagents for each new vaccine strain. In recent years, a number of alternative assays have been suggested based on either epitope recognition, receptor binding or protection from proteolysis but it is unclear how they relate to vaccine potency in clinical trials. In this report we describe the development of a lectin-based, ELISA-type assay for HA potency and find it provides similar potency estimates to SRID except in the case of a vaccine with aggregated HA and other viral proteins. In that case, SRID predicted the immunologically active HA present and ELISA techniques did not. This difference was due to tested antibodies failing to pull down or bind to the HA present unless particle aggregates were first dissociated. Furthermore, detergent treatment alone was insufficient to complete this dissociation. While others have previously demonstrated that immunocapture-based techniques can misestimate the potency of influenza vaccines depending on the individual antibodies used we demonstrate that in this case the failure was due to an inability of all antibodies to capture HA contained in the aggregated influenza vaccine.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31337591
pii: S0264-410X(19)30948-X
doi: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.07.050
pii:
doi:

Substances chimiques

Hemagglutinins 0
Influenza Vaccines 0

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

5276-5287

Informations de copyright

Crown Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

M Lemieux (M)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

B Lorbetskie (B)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

C C Luebbert (CC)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

L Walrond (L)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

C Li (C)

National Institute for Food and Drug Control and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Beijing, China.

X Li (X)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

T Cyr (T)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

S Sauvé (S)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

M J W Johnston (MJW)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

A Farnsworth (A)

Centre for Biologics Evaluation, Biologics and Genetic Therapies Directorate, HPFB, Health Canada and WHO Collaborating Center for Standardization and Evaluation of Biologicals, Ottawa, ON, Canada. Electronic address: aaron.farnsworth@canada.ca.

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Classifications MeSH