Journal article
Antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity is associated with control of pandemic H1N1 influenza virus infection of macaques
S Jegaskanda, JT Weinfurter, TC Friedrich, SJ Kenta
Journal of Virology | Published : 2013
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.03030-12
Abstract
Emerging influenza viruses pose a serious risk to global human health. Recent studies in ferrets, macaques, and humans suggest that seasonal H1N1 (sH1N1) infection provides some cross-protection against 2009 pandemic influenza viruses (H1N1pdm), but the correlates of cross-protection are poorly understood. Here we show that seasonal infection of influenza-naïve Indian rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) with A/Kawasaki/173/2001 (sH1N1) virus induces antibodies capable of binding the hemagglutinin (HA) of both the homologous seasonal virus and the antigenically divergent A/California/04/2009 (H1N1pdm) strain in the absence of detectable H1N1pdm-specific neutralizing antibodies. These influenza v..
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Grants
Awarded by NIH Office of the Director
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by a supplement to NIH grant P51RR000167/P51OD011106 to T.C.F. and by Wisconsin National Primate Research Center and Australian NHMRC grants 510448 and 455350 to S.J.K. S.J. was supported by an APA Ph.D. scholarship, a University of Melbourne MATS travel award, and a Major Bartlett Microbiology and Immunology Department award.