Professor Nigel Temperton

Chair in Molecular Virology



01634 202957


Medway School of Pharmacy

University of Kent

Medway School of Pharmacy,
Anson Building,
Central Avenue,
Chatham Maritime,
Kent, ME4 4TB
United Kingdom



Development of Lentiviral Vectors Pseudotyped With Influenza B Hemagglutinins: Application in Vaccine Immunogenicity, mAb Potency, and Sero-Surveillance Studies


Journal article


F. Ferrara, J. M. D. Del Rosario, Kelly A S da Costa, R. Kinsley, S. Scott, S. Fereidouni, C. Thompson, P. Kellam, S. Gilbert, G. Carnell, N. Temperton
Frontiers in Immunology, 2021

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Ferrara, F., Rosario, J. M. D. D., da Costa, K. A. S., Kinsley, R., Scott, S., Fereidouni, S., … Temperton, N. (2021). Development of Lentiviral Vectors Pseudotyped With Influenza B Hemagglutinins: Application in Vaccine Immunogenicity, mAb Potency, and Sero-Surveillance Studies. Frontiers in Immunology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Ferrara, F., J. M. D. Del Rosario, Kelly A S da Costa, R. Kinsley, S. Scott, S. Fereidouni, C. Thompson, et al. “Development of Lentiviral Vectors Pseudotyped With Influenza B Hemagglutinins: Application in Vaccine Immunogenicity, MAb Potency, and Sero-Surveillance Studies.” Frontiers in Immunology (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Ferrara, F., et al. “Development of Lentiviral Vectors Pseudotyped With Influenza B Hemagglutinins: Application in Vaccine Immunogenicity, MAb Potency, and Sero-Surveillance Studies.” Frontiers in Immunology, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{f2021a,
  title = {Development of Lentiviral Vectors Pseudotyped With Influenza B Hemagglutinins: Application in Vaccine Immunogenicity, mAb Potency, and Sero-Surveillance Studies},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Frontiers in Immunology},
  author = {Ferrara, F. and Rosario, J. M. D. Del and da Costa, Kelly A S and Kinsley, R. and Scott, S. and Fereidouni, S. and Thompson, C. and Kellam, P. and Gilbert, S. and Carnell, G. and Temperton, N.}
}

Abstract

Influenza B viruses (IBV) cause respiratory disease epidemics in humans and are therefore components of seasonal influenza vaccines. Serological methods are employed to evaluate vaccine immunogenicity prior to licensure. However, classical methods to assess influenza vaccine immunogenicity such as the hemagglutination inhibition assay (HI) and the serial radial hemolysis assay (SRH), have been proven to have many limitations. As such, there is a need to develop innovative methods that can improve on these traditional assays and provide advantages such as ease of production and access, safety, reproducibility, and specificity. It has been previously demonstrated that the use of replication-defective viruses, such as lentiviral vectors pseudotyped with influenza A hemagglutinins in microneutralization assays (pMN) is a safe and sensitive alternative to study antibody responses elicited by natural influenza infection or vaccination. Consequently, we have produced Influenza B hemagglutinin-pseudotypes (IBV PV) using plasmid-directed transfection. To activate influenza B hemagglutinin, we have explored the use of proteases in increasing PV titers via their co-transfection during pseudotype virus production. When tested for their ability to transduce target cells, the influenza B pseudotypes produced exhibit tropism for different cell lines. The pseudotypes were evaluated as alternatives to live virus in microneutralization assays using reference sera standards, mouse and human sera collected during vaccine immunogenicity studies, surveillance sera from seals, and monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) against IBV. The influenza B pseudotype pMN was found to effectively detect neutralizing and cross-reactive responses in all assays and shows promise as an effective and versatile tool in influenza research.





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