A systems vaccinology approach reveals temporal transcriptomic changes of immune responses to the yellow fever 17D vaccine

J Hou, S Wang, M Jia, D Li, Y Liu, Z Li… - The Journal of …, 2017 - journals.aai.org
J Hou, S Wang, M Jia, D Li, Y Liu, Z Li, H Zhu, H Xu, M Sun, L Lu, Z Zhou, H Peng, Q Zhang…
The Journal of Immunology, 2017journals.aai.org
In this study, we used a systems vaccinology approach to identify temporal changes in
immune response signatures to the yellow fever (YF)-17D vaccine, with the aim of
comprehensively characterizing immune responses associated with protective immunity. We
conducted a cohort study in which 21 healthy subjects in China were administered one dose
of the YF-17D vaccine; PBMCs were collected at 0 h and then at 4 h and days 1, 2, 3, 5, 7,
14, 28, 84, and 168 postvaccination, and analyzed by transcriptional profiling and …
Abstract
In this study, we used a systems vaccinology approach to identify temporal changes in immune response signatures to the yellow fever (YF)-17D vaccine, with the aim of comprehensively characterizing immune responses associated with protective immunity. We conducted a cohort study in which 21 healthy subjects in China were administered one dose of the YF-17D vaccine; PBMCs were collected at 0 h and then at 4 h and days 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 14, 28, 84, and 168 postvaccination, and analyzed by transcriptional profiling and immunological assays. At 4 h postvaccination, genes associated with innate cell differentiation and cytokine pathways were dramatically downregulated, whereas receptor genes were upregulated, compared with their baseline levels at 0 h. Immune response pathways were primarily upregulated on days 5 and 7, accompanied by the upregulation of the transcriptional factors JUP, STAT1, and EIF2AK2. We also observed robust activation of innate immunity within 2 d postvaccination and a durable adaptive response, as assessed by transcriptional profiling. Coexpression network analysis indicated that lysosome activity and lymphocyte proliferation were associated with dendritic cell (DC) and CD4+ T cell responses; FGL2, NFAM1, CCR1, and TNFSF13B were involved in these associations. Moreover, individuals who were baseline-seropositive for Abs against another flavivirus exhibited significantly impaired DC, NK cell, and T cell function in response to YF-17D vaccination. Overall, our findings indicate that YF-17D vaccination induces a prompt innate immune response and DC activation, a robust Ag-specific T cell response, and a persistent B cell/memory B cell response.
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