Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
In vivo dendritic cell targeting cellular vaccine induces CD4Tfh cell-dependent antibody against influenza virus.
- Journal:
- Scientific reports
- Year:
- 2016
- Authors:
- Yamasaki, Satoru et al.
- Affiliation:
- Laboratory for Immunotherapy · Japan
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
An induction of long-term cellular and humoral immunity is for the goal of vaccines, but the combination of antigens and adjuvant remain unclear. Here, we show, using a cellular vaccine carrying foreign protein antigen plus iNKT cell glycolipid antigen, designated as artificial adjuvant vector cells (aAVCs), that mature XCR1DCs in situ elicit not only ordinal antigen-specific CD4T cells, but also CD4Tfh and germinal center, resulted in inducing long-term antibody production. As a mechanism for leading the long-term antibody production by aAVC, memory CD4Tfh cells but not iNKTfh cells played an important role in a Bcl6 dependent manner. To develop it for influenza infection, we established influenza hemagglutinin-carrying aAVC (aAVC-HA) and found that all the mice vaccinated with aAVC-HA were protected from life-threatening influenza infection. Thus, the in vivo DC targeting therapy by aAVC would be useful for protection against viral infection.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27739478/