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Prior upregulation of interferon pathways in the nasopharynx impacts viral shedding following live attenuated influenza vaccine challenge in children.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Costa-Martins, André G 
Lindsey, Benjamin B 
Ogava, Rodrigo LT 
Castro, Ícaro 

Abstract

In children lacking influenza-specific adaptive immunity, upper respiratory tract innate immune responses may influence viral replication and disease outcome. We use trivalent live attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) as a surrogate challenge model in children aged 24-59 months to identify pre-infection mucosal transcriptomic signatures associated with subsequent viral shedding. Upregulation of interferon signaling pathways prior to LAIV is significantly associated with lower strain-specific viral loads (VLs) at days 2 and 7. Several interferon-stimulated genes are differentially expressed in children with pre-LAIV asymptomatic respiratory viral infections and negatively correlated with LAIV VLs. Upregulation of genes enriched in macrophages, neutrophils, and eosinophils is associated with lower VLs and found more commonly in children with asymptomatic viral infections. Variability in pre-infection mucosal interferon gene expression in children may impact the course of subsequent influenza infections. This variability may be due to frequent respiratory viral infections, demonstrating the potential importance of mucosal virus-virus interactions in children.

Description

Keywords

LAIV, asymptomatic respiratory viral infection, influenza, interferon-stimulated genes, mucosal, transcriptome, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Gene Expression Profiling, Humans, Influenza Vaccines, Influenza, Human, Interferons, Male, Nasopharynx, Transcription, Genetic, Up-Regulation, Vaccination, Vaccines, Attenuated, Viral Load, Virus Shedding

Journal Title

Cell Rep Med

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

2666-3791
2666-3791

Volume Title

2

Publisher

Elsevier BV