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Journal of Virology, February 2008, p. 1350-1359, Vol. 82, No. 3
0022-538X/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/JVI.01615-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

and
Sang-Moo Kang1*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Emory Vaccine Center, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia,1 Department of Microbiology, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama2
Received 24 July 2007/ Accepted 8 November 2007
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The currently licensed inactivated influenza virus vaccines for human use are whole virus or disrupted viral antigens containing the viral surface glycoproteins. The induction of strain-specific neutralizing antibodies is the basis of protective immunity provided by the current, parenterally administered influenza vaccine. The vaccine provides protection against viruses that are closely matched antigenically with those in the vaccine. However, the inactivated parenteral vaccine is less protective against antigenic drift variants within a subtype of the influenza virus and does not provide protection against viruses from different subtypes (30, 33, 34), and thus the annual production of new vaccines is required.
Several groups have studied the role of T cells in the induction of heterosubtypic immunity by live virus infections (4, 6, 14, 20, 23). Although the precise immune effector(s) responsible for heterosubtypic immunity has not been fully defined, effector CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) were considered to contribute to this immunity (12, 13, 18, 23, 37). These CTL recognize epitopes of internal proteins conserved among influenza A viruses, such as the nucleoprotein. However, mice depleted of CD8+ T cells in vivo were protected against heterosubtypic lethal challenge (6, 14). In addition, heterosubtypic immunity has been demonstrated for β2-microglobulin-deficient, T-cell-depleted, or gamma interferon (IFN-
)-deficient mice (6, 20, 21). These previous reports suggest that immune components other than T cells also contribute to heterosubtypic protection.
In contrast to the live virus infection model, heterosubtypic protection and immune correlates after immunization with an inactivated virus have not yet been well identified. In general, inactivated influenza virus has been considered incapable of inducing heterosubtypic immunity, since inactivated antigens do not induce strong CTL responses. Nevertheless, some cross-protection against different subtypes was demonstrated, accompanying a certain degree of morbidity, when mice were immunized intranasally with high doses of an inactivated virus or coimmunized intranasally with an adjuvant (31, 32, 34). Although these studies indicate a role of B cells, the mechanisms by which inactivated influenza virus vaccine induces cross-protective immune responses have not been characterized.
Understanding the cross-protective immune responses induced by inactivated influenza virus is critical for developing more effective influenza vaccines. In this study, we investigated how immunization with inactivated influenza A/PR8 virus (H1N1) can induce immune responses conferring protection against challenge with the heterologous influenza strain A/WSN (H1N1) or the heterosubtypic strain A/Philippines (H3N2) in comparison with live virus infection. We found that intranasal immunization with inactivated influenza virus in the presence of cholera toxin (CT) induced enhanced cross-reactive binding and neutralizing antibodies in both mucosal and systemic compartments. Importantly, our results suggest that the presence of cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies in the lungs and in blood plays a critical role in providing heterosubtypic cross-protective immunity. The underlying potential mechanism and advantages of mucosal delivery of influenza vaccine are discussed.
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Immunization and challenge. Female inbred BALB/c mice (Charles River) aged 6 to 8 weeks were used. Isoflurane-anesthetized mice were immunized intranasally with 50 µl phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) containing either 5 µg or 25 µg of inactivated PR8 virus (PR8i) in the presence or absence of CT (2 µg) on days 0 and 14. For sublethal infection, mice were infected intranasally with a 50% lethal dose (LD50) in 50 µl PBS. As shown in Table 1, isoflurane-anesthetized mice were challenged with different doses of homologous virus (A/PR8; H1N1), heterologous virus (A/WSN; H1N1), or a heterosubtypic strain (A/Philippines; H3N2) in 50 µl of PBS per mouse on week 4 after the booster immunization. Mice were observed daily to monitor changes in body weight and to record death.
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TABLE 1. Protective efficacy of intranasal immunization with inactivated A/PR8 virusa
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Antibody responses. IgG and IgA antibody levels specific to influenza virus in the serum were determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) as described previously (24, 25). Ninety-six-well microtiter plates (MaxiSorp immunoplate; Nunc Life Technologies, Basel, Switzerland) were coated with 100 µl of inactivated virus (4 µg/ml) in coating buffer (0.1 M sodium carbonate, pH 9.5) at 4°C overnight. Serially diluted sera (100 µl) were added to wells to determine influenza virus-specific binding antibody levels. Color was developed using the substrate o-phenylenediamine (Zymed, San Francisco, CA), and the optical density was read at 450 nm. For antibody titers, dilutions giving values higher than the mean plus two standard deviations of that of the background (naïve mouse control) were considered positive.
Lung viral titer and virus neutralization assays. Lung viral titer and neutralization assays were performed using MDCK cells following a previously described procedure (24, 25). Briefly, 190 µl of a serially diluted serum sample was mixed with 10 µl of diluted virus stock containing approximately 100 infectious particles, incubated at 37°C for 1 h, and then added to the cell monolayers. After incubation for 2 to 3 days, the cells were fixed with 0.25% glutaraldehyde and stained with 1% crystal violet to visualize plaques. The neutralization activity was expressed as the percentage of plaque reduction.
Detection of antibody-secreting cells in the bone marrow. To detect influenza virus-specific antibody-secreting cells, PR8i viral antigen was used to coat Multiscreen 96-well filtration ELISPOT plates (Millipore). Freshly isolated cells from bone marrow (1 x 106 cells) were added to each well and incubated for 48 h at 37°C with 5% CO2. Using horseradish peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse immunoglobulin antibodies and the ELISPOT substrate diaminobenzidine (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), color was developed following the manufacturer's instructions, and counting of ELISPOTs was performed as described previously (25).
Heterosubtypic protective role of immune sera and lung extracts. Lung and serum samples from immunized mice prior to challenge or at day 4 postchallenge were heated at 56°C for 30 min. Twenty microliters of heat-treated sample was incubated with 40 µl of A/Philippines virus (2,000 PFU [40x LD50]) at 30°C for 30 min. The reaction mixtures (40 µl) were administered to naïve mice, and body weight changes and survival rates were monitored daily. Naïve mice infected with a similar mixture of A/Philippines and lung or serum samples from naïve mice were used as controls.
Depletion of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells in immunized mice. Mice were immunized with 25 µg of inactivated A/PR8 (H1N1) virus plus CT at weeks 0 and 2. To deplete CD4+ T cells, immunized mice were administered anti-CD4 GK1.5 antibody (800 µg for each mouse) intraperitoneally at days –3, –1, and +2 postinfection. For depletion of CD8+ T cells, PR8-plus-CT-immunized mice were treated intraperitoneally with anti-CD8 antibody (clone 53.6.72; Bio-Express, West Lebanon, NH) at a dose of 550 µg per mouse at days –3, –1, and +2 postinfection. Anti-CD4 or -CD8 antibody-treated mice were challenged with a lethal dose of heterosubtypic virus A/Philippines (H3N2), and morbidity and mortality were monitored daily.
Statistics. All parameters were recorded for individuals within all groups. Statistical comparisons of data were carried out using the analysis of variance and Npar one-way Kruskal-Wallis tests of the PC-SAS system. P values of <0.05 were considered significant.
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Next, to determine heterosubtypic immunity under stringent conditions, high doses (3 x 103 PFU and 2 x 103 PFU; equivalent to 60 LD50 and 40 LD50, respectively) of A/Philippines (H3N2) were used to challenge the immunized mice. All mice immunized with A/PR8 alone succumbed to death after showing clinical symptoms. In contrast, groups of mice receiving CT as an adjuvant with a low dose of PR8 immunogen (5 µg) showed high rates of protection, with minor clinical symptoms, after A/Philippines challenge (83% to 100%, depending on the challenge dose). Mice immunized with a dose of 25 µg PR8i with CT adjuvant showed 100% protection, without any clinical signs, after challenge with the same dose of A/Philippines (2 x 103 PFU).
As another parameter for evaluating protective effects, body weight changes were monitored after challenge. Mice immunized with PR8i (H1N1) alone did not show any changes in body weight when challenged with higher or lower lethal doses of PR8 (H1N1) or WSN (H1N1) virus. However, the same group of PR8-immunized mice showed a significant loss in body weight when challenged with A/Philippines (H3N2), indicating that these mice suffered severe illness. In contrast, mice immunized with inactivated A/PR8 plus CT adjuvant showed slight changes (5-µg group) or no changes (25-µg group) in body weight after a lethal dose challenge with A/Philippines (2 x 103 PFU); all survived, except for the group that received 5 µg inactivated A/PR8 and was challenged with a high dose, which showed 83% protection. Thus, coadministration of vaccine with CT plays a role in providing cross-protective immunity.
Lung viral titers after challenge in mice immunized with inactivated A/PR8. Lung viral titers postchallenge were analyzed to determine the replication of challenge virus at day 4 postchallenge (Fig. 1). The naïve mouse group receiving challenge virus A/PR8 or A/WSN showed high viral titers, reaching around 6 log, while lower viral titers (2 log or lower) were detected in immunized mice. However, mice from both the naïve and PR8i vaccine groups showed >6-log virus titers when challenged with a lethal dose of A/Philippines virus. Interestingly, the group receiving the CT adjuvant showed low virus titers in the lung even with A/Philippines challenge. These results indicate that mice coimmunized with inactivated A/PR8 (H1N1) and CT adjuvant induce protective immune responses that can inhibit the replication of the heterosubtypic A/Philippines virus (H3N2) and that heterosubtypic immunity is an achievable goal with a reasonable dose of inactivated influenza virus vaccine in combination with an effective adjuvant.
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FIG. 1. Virus titers in lungs at day 4 postchallenge. Mice immunized intranasally with PR8i alone (25 µg) or with CT (2 µg) adjuvant (PR8i+CT) were challenged with a high dose of A/PR8 (300 LD50), A/WSN (300 LD50), or A/Philippines (40 LD50) (groups PR8i+PR8, PR8i+WSN, PR8i+Phil, and PR8i+CT+Phil). Naïve mice were infected with a lethal dose of A/PR8 (10 LD50), A/WSN (10 LD50), or A/Philippines (10 LD50) (groups Naive+PR8, Naive+WSN, and Naive+Phil).
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TABLE 2. Increases in binding antibodies upon heterosubtypic viral challengea
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FIG. 2. Cross-reactive mucosal antibodies detected by ELISA. Mucosal antibodies induced by intranasal immunization with PR8i alone (25 µg) or PR8i plus CT (PR8i+CT) were tested for reactivity to homologous A/PR8, heterologous A/WSN, and heterosubtypic A/Philippines as ELISA coating antigens. IgG and IgA antibody titers are expressed as the highest dilution of serum having a mean optical density at 450 nm greater than the mean plus 2 standard deviations for similarly diluted naïve serum samples. (A) IgG to A/PR8; (B) IgA to A/PR8; (C) IgG to A/WSN; (D) IgA to A/WSN; (E) IgG to A/Philippines; (F) IgA to A/Philippines.
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FIG. 3. Serum neutralizing activities. Sera from groups of mice immunized with PR8i alone or coimmunized with CT (PR8i+CT) were collected 2 weeks after the second immunization. Infected sera were collected from mice infected with a sublethal dose (0.5 LD50) of A/PR8 virus at day 30 (PR8 infection). Diluted serum samples were incubated with 100 PFU of PR8, WSN, or Philippines virus, and a standard plaque reduction assay was performed using MDCK cells.
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TABLE 3. Mucosal neutralizing titersa
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FIG. 4. Antibody-secreting cells in the bone marrow. (A) IgA antibody-secreting cells. (B) IgG antibody-secreting cells. Bone marrow cells were collected from mice immunized with PR8i. For determination of virus-specific antibody-secreting cells, ELISPOT plates were coated with the corresponding inactivated virus. "PR8 infection" indicates a group of mice that recovered from infection with a sublethal dose of PR8 (0.5 LD50). The spots for antibody-producing cells from the bone marrow cells were counted and expressed based on 1.5 x 106 total bone marrow cells per well.
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FIG. 5. Heterosubtypic protective effects of immune sera or lung extracts. Sera and lung samples collected from PR8i-immunized mice (groups PR8i and PR8i+CT) on day 4 postchallenge with A/Philippines were heated (56°C for 30 min) and then incubated with 2,000 PFU A/Philippines virus (40 LD50) at 37°C for 30 min. Naïve mice were infected with a mixture of A/Philippines virus and lung or serum samples and monitored for morbidity (A) and mortality (B).
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FIG. 6. Rapid increases in cross-reactive neutralizing activity upon challenge infection. PR8i, mice immunized intranasally with PR8i alone; PR8i+CT, mice immunized with PR8i plus CT. Neutralizing titers were determined using A/Philippines virus (H3N2) and serum and lung samples collected from immunized mice prior to challenge (immunized) and on day 4 after challenge with A/Philippines (immunized + Cha).
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Protection in CD4+ or CD8+ T-cell-depleted mice. The result showing that sera and lung extracts collected from the CT adjuvant group prior to challenge infection were not protective may indicate a potential role of cellular components in providing heterosubtypic protection. To determine the potential role of CD4+ T cells in conferring cross-protective immunity, immunized mice were treated with anti-CD4 antibody prior to challenge infection, which resulted in the depletion of most CD4+ T cells in both lungs and spleens (Fig. 7A and B). Similarly, a group of mice treated with anti-CD8 antibody showed no detectable CD8 T cells in either the spleen or lungs (Fig. 8A and B). Following challenge with a lethal dose of the heterosubtypic virus A/Philippines (40 LD50), lung viral titers and survival rates were determined (Fig. 7C and D). Groups of mice that were immunized with PR8i plus CT and then treated with anti-CD4 or -CD8 antibody showed similar efficacies of protection against A/Philippines to those for nontreated mice. Immune mice with depletion of CD4+ T cells resulted in similarly reduced lung viral titers to those of the nontreated group. However, CD8 T-cell depletion was found to be somewhat less effective at inhibiting lung viral replication, since titers observed in the anti-CD8-treated group were 100-fold higher than those in the nontreated group (Fig. 8C). These results suggest that neither CD4+ nor CD8+ T cells are required for heterosubtypic protection against A/Philippines virus, although the effector CD8+ T cells in the immune mice (PR8i plus CT) may partially contribute to inhibiting the replication of the heterosubtypic challenge virus.
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FIG. 7. Effects of CD4+ T-cell depletion in conferring heterosubtypic protection. Mice immunized with PR8i and CT were treated with either PBS or anti-mouse CD4 antibody (GK1.5) prior to challenge infection with A/Philippines virus. (A) Depletion of CD4+ T cells in spleen (at day 4 postchallenge). (B) Depletion of CD4+ T cells in lung (at day 4 postchallenge). (C) Lung viral titers on day 4 after challenge with A/Philippines (40 LD50). (D) Survival rates after challenge infection with A/Philippines (40 LD50).
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FIG. 8. Effects of CD8+ T-cell depletion in conferring heterosubtypic protection. Mice immunized with PR8i plus CT were treated with either PBS or anti-mouse CD8 antibody (clone 53.6.72) prior to challenge infection with A/Philippines virus. (A) Depletion of CD8+ T cells in spleen (at day 4 postchallenge). (B) Depletion of CD8+ T cells in lung (at day 4 postchallenge). (C) Lung viral titers on day 4 after challenge with A/Philippines (40 LD50). (D) Survival rates after challenge infection with A/Philippines (40 LD50).
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We observed that inactivated A/PR8 (H1N1) immunization conferred complete protection against high doses of A/PR8 and A/WSN (H1N1) viruses without any clinical signs of disease but did not provide protection against the heterosubtypic strain A/Philippines (H3N2). Although it is not possible to compare the results directly from other studies, Takada et al. demonstrated that intranasal immunization with high doses of inactivated H5N1 virus (300 µg) provided partial to complete protection against viruses of different subtypes, with some clinical symptoms (32). This immunization dose may be too high to be applicable to humans. In another study, intranasal immunization with a moderate dose of 60 µg of inactivated H3N2 virus in the absence of adjuvant showed partial protection against low-dose challenge with H5N1 virus (34). Our studies were performed under stringent conditions with high doses of challenge viruses, and the PR8i-only group showed no protection against heterosubtypic challenge. Therefore, the dose and frequency of immunization with inactivated influenza virus seem to affect the protective efficacy against heterosubtypic virus. However, the immune components responsible for conferring heterosubtypic immunity have not previously been identified clearly.
In live influenza virus infection studies using CD4+ or CD8+ T-cell-, natural killer cell-, or IFN-
-deficient mice, immune components other than T cells have been suggested to play a role in providing heterosubtypic immunity (4, 6, 14, 20, 21). Protection by the current inactivated influenza virus vaccine is based mainly on induction of neutralizing antibodies against the homologous virus. However, previous studies using mice mucosally vaccinated with inactivated virus suggested that heterosubtypic immunity can occur in the absence of cross-neutralizing antibodies (32, 34). In our study, coadministration of inactivated A/PR8 virus with CT provided 100% protection against the heterosubtypic strain A/Philippines, whereas inactivated A/PR8 alone provided no protection. Analysis of serum antibodies showed cross-reactive serum neutralizing antibody activity against A/Philippines at a low level in the CT-coimmunized group. However, mice immunized with A/PR8 alone did not show detectable levels of cross-neutralizing activity against A/Philippines. Thus, the presence of cross-neutralizing antibodies seems likely to play an important role in inducing heterosubtypic immunity.
Intranasal immunization with inactivated influenza virus was demonstrated to be superior to parenteral immunization in inducing protective heterosubtypic immunity. However, the mechanism for this observation is not well understood. One obvious factor is the induction of mucosal immune responses, which are important as a first line of immune defense against influenza virus infection and are not induced effectively by parenteral immunization (32, 34). It is known that polymeric IgA in secretions has broader neutralizing activity than does serum IgG (17). The CT adjuvant group immunized with inactivated A/PR8 that exhibited 100% protection against the heterosubtypic virus A/Philippines showed significantly enhanced levels of both IgG and IgA antibody binding to A/Philippines in the mucosal respiratory tract, particularly in the lungs, which was not observed in the PR8 group. Importantly, we detected cross-reactive neutralizing activity against A/Philippines in lung samples only for the group receiving the CT adjuvant. These cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies (in both lungs and sera) against the heterosubtypic strain, although present at low levels, might play a critical role in inducing protective immunity against heterosubtypic challenge.
To better understand the immune components responsible for heterosubtypic immunity, immune sera or lung extracts from the CT adjuvant group prior to challenge were tested for their protective effects in naïve mice after incubation with live A/Philippines virus (40 LD50) in vitro, and we found that low levels of cross-reactive neutralizing titers were not high enough to be protective (data not shown). To investigate other potential components contributing to heterosubtypic protection, we determined the potential role of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells in heterosubtypic immunity by acute depletion prior to challenge infection. Depletion of CD4+ or CD8+ T cells did not affect the heterosubtypic protective efficacy observed for the CT adjuvant group. These results are consistent with a previous study showing that acute depletion of CD4+ T cells or genetic CD8+ T-cell deficiency did not significantly reduce heterosubtypic protection in mice immunized with inactivated virus and adjuvant (34), although we cannot exclude the possible role of effector CD8+ T cells in lowering the viral load, as the CD8+ T-cell-depleted immune mice showed higher lung viral titers than did nontreated mice. When we analyzed the reactive immune responses against A/Philippines in sera and lung extracts at early times postchallenge, the most striking feature was a rapid increase in neutralizing activity against A/Philippines in sera (40-fold) as well as in lung samples (5-fold) from the CT adjuvant-PR8 group at day 4 postchallenge, which was not observed in the PR8-immunized postchallenge group. This increased neutralizing activity correlated with complete protection when naïve mice were infected with high doses of A/Philippines virus (40 LD50) after incubation with immune sera or lung extracts collected at day 4 postchallenge from the CT adjuvant group. Overall, our results indicate that the presence of neutralizing antibodies cross-reactive to the heterosubtypic strain can provide the host with the ability to induce rapid protective immunity upon heterosubtypic viral infection.
The CT holotoxin consists of a toxigenic A subunit (CTA) with ribosyltransferase activity and a pentameric B subunit (CTB), which is responsible for CT binding to GM1 gangliosides present on most nucleated cells (5). The ribosyltransferase activity increases the intracellular cyclic AMP acting on several GTP-binding proteins, which may play an important role in its adjuvant property. CT can induce phenotypic and functional maturation of dendritic cells, promoting up-regulation of major histocompatibility complex class II and stimulatory CD86 molecules (2, 10, 11). CT can also activate epithelial cells, inducing the production of chemokines (macrophage chemoattractant protein 1, macrophage inflammatory protein 1
/β, and RANTES), and can augment priming of CD4+ T cells secreting cytokines (IFN-
, interleukin-4 [IL-4], IL-5, and IL-10) and the antigen presentation by dendritic and B cells (9, 15). CT strongly promotes germinal center formation and enhances the development of immunological memory (16, 35, 36), which might have contributed to the increased levels of bone marrow antibody-secreting cells in the CT adjuvant group shown in this study. It is generally considered that the potency of CTB without the ribosyltransferase activity is significantly weaker than that of the intact CT holotoxin. We also observed that CTB was less effective than CT in inducing cross-protective heterosubtypic immunity with the influenza vaccine (data not shown). Thus, inclusion of an effective adjuvant will be an advantage in broadening protective immunity, as shown in this and other studies (34). This approach may improve the efficacy of inactivated influenza virus vaccines, abolish the safety concerns inherent in the use of live virus or viral vector-based vaccines, and importantly, confer protective immunity to viruses with new pandemic potential.
We thank Yumiko Matsuoka for the influenza A/WSN/33 strain and Robert Mittler for anti-CD4 antibody (GK1.5).
Published ahead of print on 21 November 2007. ![]()
Present address: International Vaccine Institute, Seoul National University (SNU) Research Park, San 4-8, Bongcheon-7-dong, Kwanak-gu, Seoul 151-919, Korea. ![]()
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