A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Rhinoviruses A and C elicit long-lasting antibody responses with limited cross-neutralization




AuthorsBochkov Yury A., Devries Mark, Tetreault Kaitlin, Gangnon Ronald, Lee Sujin, Bacharier Leonard B., Busse William W., Camargo Carlos A., Choi Timothy, Cohen Robyn, De Ramyani, DeMuri Gregory P., Fitzpatrick Anne M., Gergen Peter J., Grindle Kristine, Gruchalla Rebecca, Hartert Tina, Hasegawa Kohei, Khurana Hershey Gurjit K., Holt Patrick, Homil Kiara, Jartti Tuomas, Kattan Meyer, Kercsmar Carolyn, Kim Haejin, Laing Ingrid A., Le Souëf Peter N., Liu Andrew H., Mauger David T., Pappas Tressa, Patel Shilpa J., Phipatanakul Wanda, Pongracic Jacqueline, Seroogy Christine, Sly Peter D., Tisler Christopher, Wald Ellen R., Wood Robert, Lemanske Robert F. Jr., Jackson Daniel J., Gern James E.; program collaborators for Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes

PublisherJohn Wiley and Sons Inc

Publication year2023

JournalJournal of Medical Virology

Journal name in sourceJournal of Medical Virology

Article numbere29058

Volume95

Issue8

eISSN1096-9071

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1002/jmv.29058

Web address https://doi.org/10.1002/jmv.29058

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/181110157


Abstract

Rhinoviruses (RVs) can cause severe wheezing illnesses in young children and patients with asthma. Vaccine development has been hampered by the multitude of RV types with little information about cross-neutralization. We previously showed that neutralizing antibody (nAb) responses to RV-C are detected twofold to threefold more often than those to RV-A throughout childhood. Based on those findings, we hypothesized that RV-C infections are more likely to induce either cross-neutralizing or longer-lasting antibody responses compared with RV-A infections. We pooled RV diagnostic data from multiple studies of children with respiratory illnesses and compared the expected versus observed frequencies of sequential infections with RV-A or RV-C types using log-linear regression models. We tested longitudinally collected plasma samples from children to compare the duration of RV-A versus RV-C nAb responses. Our models identified limited reciprocal cross-neutralizing relationships for RV-A (A12–A75, A12–A78, A20–A78, and A75–A78) and only one for RV-C (C2–C40). Serologic analysis using reference mouse sera and banked human plasma samples confirmed that C40 infections induced nAb responses with modest heterotypic activity against RV-C2. Mixed-effects regression modeling of longitudinal human plasma samples collected from ages 2 to 18 years demonstrated that RV-A and RV-C illnesses induced nAb responses of similar duration. These results indicate that both RV-A and RV-C nAb responses have only modest cross-reactivity that is limited to genetically similar types. Contrary to our initial hypothesis, RV-C species may include even fewer cross-neutralizing types than RV-A, whereas the duration of nAb responses during childhood is similar between the two species. The modest heterotypic responses suggest that RV vaccines must have a broad representation of prevalent types.


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Last updated on 2025-27-03 at 21:55