Swine influenza A replicon particle and live attenuated influenza virus vaccines induce differential systemic and mucosal antibody and T cell responses
Meghan Wymore Brand, Bryan S. Kaplan, Carine K. Souza, Jayne E. Wiarda, J. Brian Kimble, Bailey Arruda, Daniel R. Perez, Amy L. Baker

TL;DR
This study compares two types of swine flu vaccines and finds they trigger different immune responses, which could help improve vaccination strategies.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into mucosal and systemic immune responses induced by RNA-based and live attenuated swine influenza vaccines.
Findings
LAIV reduced viral shedding and lung viral load, while RP-HA limited lung lesions.
LAIV induced higher mucosal IgA and stronger CD8+ T cell responses compared to RP-HA.
Both vaccines stimulated T cell cytokine production but differed in CD4+ T cell responses.
Abstract
Influenza A virus (IAV) in swine is a significant economic concern, and there is a critical need to improve vaccine efficacy. Commercial and experimental vaccine platforms are effective against homologous infection but may not reliably provide protection against drifted or heterologous viruses. Live attenuated influenza A virus (LAIV) vaccines induce mucosal antibody and localized cellular immune responses that may provide partial protection from drifted IAV. However, limited data exist on the induction of mucosal antibody and cellular immune responses and heterologous protection induced by RNA-based vaccines in swine. In this work, experimental, non-adjuvanted hemagglutinin-based replicon particle (RP-HA), and live attenuated influenza A virus (LAIV) vaccines were assessed for induction of mucosal antibody, cellular immune responses, and heterologous protection. LAIV reduced viral…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfluenza Virus Research Studies · Animal Disease Management and Epidemiology · Microbial infections and disease research
