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Is It Possible to Develop a “Universal” Influenza Virus Vaccine?
Author(s) -
James E. Crowe
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
cold spring harbor perspectives in biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.011
H-Index - 173
ISSN - 1943-0264
DOI - 10.1101/cshperspect.a029496
Subject(s) - biology , reassortment , virology , antigenicity , immunogenicity , antigenic drift , hemagglutinin (influenza) , antigenic shift , antigen , monoclonal antibody , influenza vaccine , antibody , epitope , virus , genetics , infectious disease (medical specialty) , covid-19 , medicine , disease , pathology
Development of optimal vaccines for influenza is challenging, in part as a result of the high antigenic variability in field strains associated with genetic shift from reassortment and genetic drift from point mutations. Discovery of conserved antigenic sites on the hemagglutinin (HA) protein for neutralizing antibodies suggested the possibility that influenza vaccines could be developed that induce focused antibody responses to the conserved neutralizing determinants, especially the HA stem region. Recent studies have focused on the antigenicity and immunogenicity of such domains, using monoclonal antibodies and candidate-engineered HA stem-based vaccines. Much progress has been made, but we still do not fully understand the biology of the immune response to this unique antigenic region.

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