Doctors recommend getting your flu shot annually, since the specific influenza strain it targets varies from year to year. But what if the shot could be more effective while protecting against more strains? Researchers from the University of Missouri School of Medicine are one step closer to making this happen. When the immune system sees a new strain of a familiar virus, it typically focuses on the parts it “remembers” most, even if those regions have changed. “Epitope-spanning antigenic variation reprograms immunodominance and broadens immunity in sequential influenza vaccination” was recently published in Nature Communications.
“In our vaccine model, we targeted specific but distinct regions of the protein on the surface of the influenza virus. These regions are called epitopes,” said study author Henry Wan. “The model included different versions of epitopes in hopes of redirecting how the immune system responds. We found that the vaccine approach helped the immune system target more variants of the virus, leading to broader protection.”
Wan says the epitopes help the immune system see the flu virus differently, and it learns to respond with more coordination between the different types of immune cells. Some of the epitopes are also not as likely to change, which could make flu vaccines more reliable or even help create a universal flu vaccine.
