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Immune Responses to Influenza Vaccination

$33,469ZIAFY2025AINIH

National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases

Investigators

Linked publications & trials

Abstract

In order to evaluate human immune responses in depth, I helped initiate and coordinate one of the initial studies from the NIH Center for Human Immunology, which focused on immune responses to vaccination for influenza. This study was designed to help build a data base of normal human variation (the human immunome) and to understand how variation in immune states contributes to immune responses and disease (Tsang, Schwartzberg et al, Cell 2014). As a follow-up to these studies, Dr. John Tsang's laboratory performed CITESeq technology to uncover specific cellular contributions to baseline states (or set points) that contribute to responsiveness to vaccines (Kotliarov et al Nat Med 2020). Strkingly, these same signatures can predict severity of certain types of Lupus. To further understand responses to immunization, the CHI conducted a follow-up study comparing responses to both an unadjuvanted and an adjuvanted vaccine against Influenza H5N1. To complement this work, we have added new assays, including Somologics for indepth analyses of serum analytes and CITE-Seq. THis has been followed up by several studies that have examined responses to adjuvanted vaccines using high dimensional assays including CITE-Seq. Notably, responses to adjuvants parallel findings on baseline status that contribute to vaccine efficacy, providing common themes on immune responsiveness to vaccination that may help inform evaluation of new vaccines including those for SARS-CoV2 (Apps et al, Cell Reports 2024 PMC11949244; Mule et al,Immunity 2024 PMC 38697118;Cortese et al Nat Immunol 2025 PMC12158788)

View original record on NIH RePORTER →