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Impact of Maternal Vaccination on Antibody Transfer and Protection of Infants

29 Pages Posted: 13 May 2021 Publication Status: Published

See all articles by Carolyn M. Boudreau

Carolyn M. Boudreau

The Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard

John S. Burke

Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard

Kiel D. Shuey

University of Washington - Department of Medicine

Caitlin Wolf

University of Washington - Department of Medicine

Joanne Katz

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - Department of International Health

James Tielsch

George Washington University - Department of Global Health

Subarna Khatry

Nepal Nutrition Intervention Project

Steven C. LeClerq

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - Department of International Health

Janet A. Englund

University of Washington - Department of Pediatrics; Seattle Children's Research Institute

Helen Y. Chu

University of Washington - Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases

Galit Alter

MassachusettsGeneral Hospital - Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard

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Abstract

Influenza is an important cause of illness and morbidity for infants. Seasonal influenza vaccination during pregnancy protects infants; however, the precise influence of maternal vaccination and how vaccine-elicited antibodies provide protection in some but not all infants is incompletely understood. We comprehensively profiled the transfer of functional antibodies and defined humoral correlates of immunity against influenza in a clinical trial of maternal influenza vaccination. Influenza-specific antibody subclass levels, Fcɣ receptor (FCGR) binding levels, and antibody-dependent innate immune functions were all profiled in the mothers during pregnancy and at birth, and in cord blood. Vaccination increased influenza-specific antibody levels, antibody binding to FCGR, and specific antibody-dependent innate immune functions in both maternal and cord blood, with FCGR binding most enhanced via vaccination. Influenza-specific FCGR binding titers were lower in cord blood of infants who subsequently developed influenza infection. Collectively these data suggest that in addition to increased antibody titers, the selective transfer of FCGR-binding antibodies contributes to the protective immune response in infants against influenza.

Keywords: antibody; influenza; Fc receptor; placental transfer; vaccination; Fc effector function

Suggested Citation

Boudreau, Carolyn M. and Burke, John S. and Shuey, Kiel D. and Wolf, Caitlin and Katz, Joanne and Tielsch, James and Khatry, Subarna and LeClerq, Steven C. and Englund, Janet A. and Chu, Helen Y. and Alter, Galit, Impact of Maternal Vaccination on Antibody Transfer and Protection of Infants. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3845687 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3845687
This version of the paper has not been formally peer reviewed.

Carolyn M. Boudreau

The Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard ( email )

Boston, MA
United States

John S. Burke

Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard ( email )

Boston, MA
United States

Kiel D. Shuey

University of Washington - Department of Medicine

Seattle, WA 98195
United States

Caitlin Wolf

University of Washington - Department of Medicine

Seattle, WA 98195
United States

Joanne Katz

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - Department of International Health ( email )

Baltimore, MD 21205
United States

James Tielsch

George Washington University - Department of Global Health

2121 I Street NW
Washington, DC 20052
United States

Subarna Khatry

Nepal Nutrition Intervention Project ( email )

Steven C. LeClerq

Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health - Department of International Health ( email )

Baltimore, MD 21205
United States

Janet A. Englund

University of Washington - Department of Pediatrics ( email )

Seattle, WA
United States

Seattle Children's Research Institute ( email )

Seattle, WA 98101
United States

Helen Y. Chu

University of Washington - Division of Allergy and Infectious Diseases ( email )

Seattle, WA 98109
United States

Galit Alter (Contact Author)

MassachusettsGeneral Hospital - Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT and Harvard ( email )

Boston, MA
United States

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