Seasonal influenza vaccines lack efficacy against drifted or pandemic influenza strains. Developing improved vaccines that elicit broader immunity remains a public health priority. Immune responses to current vaccines focus on the haemagglutinin head domain, whereas next-generation vaccines target less variable virus structures, including the haemagglutinin stem. Strategies employed to improve vaccine efficacy involve using structure-based design and nanoparticle display to optimize the antigenicity and immunogenicity of target antigens; increasing the antigen dose; using novel adjuvants; stimulating cellular immunity; and targeting other viral proteins, including neuraminidase, matrix protein 2 or nucleoprotein. Improved understanding of influenza antigen structure and immunobiology is advancing novel vaccine candidates into human trials.
CITATION STYLE
Wei, C. J., Crank, M. C., Shiver, J., Graham, B. S., Mascola, J. R., & Nabel, G. J. (2020, April 1). Next-generation influenza vaccines: opportunities and challenges. Nature Reviews Drug Discovery. Nature Research. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41573-019-0056-x
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