Researchers are one step closer to creating a universal, one-shot influenza vaccine following the discovery that T cells, essential in the immune response to influenza, can recognise and attack emerging, mutant strains of the virus.

 

An international research collaboration, led by University of Melbourne Associate Professor Katherine Kedzierska from the Peter Doherty Institute for Infection and Immunity and Dr Stephanie Gras from Monash University, used cutting edge single-cell technology, never before used in human influenza investigations, to hone in on human T cells one cell at a time to capture their response to the various strains.

 

The study, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) on Monday, found how the T cells reacted to new mutant strains of influenza as well as viruses they had previously been exposed to.

 

The team used the Australian Synchrotron to scrutinise the structure of the cells to identify how they recognise the mutant strains. They found that it was their flexibility and ability to adapt that enabled the T cells to essentially bully the new strains into submission.

 

Associate Professor Kedzierska said finding this piece of the puzzle was a major step forward on the path to creating a one-shot, T cell-mediated influenza vaccine for life-long immunity against the virus, which the World Health Organization estimates infects between three and five million people globally every year.

 

‘This is a game changer in flu research. Previous research has shown us T cells provide universal, protective immunity to influenza but, until now, we didn’t know why or how.

 

‘By using state-of-the-art procedures, this study enabled us to dissect the immune response to understand how this immunity occurs.’

 

Associate Professor Kedzierska said further research was necessary before a universal vaccine could be created.

 

‘Our past research has shown that only a seventh of the world’s population have the tissue make-up that provides universal immunity to influenza, the difference between a runny nose and being bed ridden.

 

‘Now we know what to look for, our challenge is to find these receptors in those with a different tissue composition and elicit a similar response.’

 

Dr Stephanie Gras said the precise, high-power X-Ray capability of the Macromolecular and Micro Crystallography (MX1 and MX2) beamlines was essential to the four-year study.

 

‘Use of the Australian Synchrotron was absolutely crucial to understanding these fine details of the immune response to influenza.’

  

Above image courtesy of ABC news

 

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