PROJECT SUMMARY
Seasonal influenza viruses cause significant disease burden. While seasonal influenza vaccines are available,
these are often poorly efficacious due to mismatch with circulating virus strains, particularly in the populations at
greatest risk of complications from infection, including the elderly, infant, and immunocompromised. Influenza A
viruses (IAV) also pose a pandemic risk for which seasonal influenza vaccines provide no cross protection. In
2018, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) released a strategic plan for developing
a universal influenza vaccine and subsequently released the FOA PA-18-859, “Advancing Research Needed to
Develop a Universal Influenza Vaccine.” The long-term goal of this proposal is to develop a universal influenza
vaccine.
We hypothesize that a flu vaccine composed of broadly cross-reactive B-and T-epitopes covalently linked to an
immune adjuvant will elicit potent immune responses and protect against diverse influenza A virus infections and
associated disease. This expectation is supported by our prior studies which demonstrated a fully multi-
component vaccine composed of tumor associated glycopeptide B- and CTL-epitope, a peptide CD4 T cell
epitope and a TLR2 agonist (Pam3CysSK4) elicited robust immune responses and protected against a stringent
tumor challenge in a murine cancer model. We will chemically synthesize multi-component vaccines that are
composed of conserved peptide antigens derived from IAV and an adjuvant such as Pam3CysSK4 or
monophosphoryl lipid A (Aim 1). In addition, we will employ an enzymatic glycan remodeling strategy to modify
recombinant hemagglutinin (rHA), which is used as a licensed flu vaccine, with various TLR agonists and DC
targeting moieties (Aim 2). To focus immunity to the more conserved stalk domain of HA, novel HAstalk proteins
will be examine modified by immune-potentiating moieties. The immunogenicity and efficacy will be evaluated in
murine (Aims 1 and 2) and ferret (Aim 3) vaccination and challenge models, using innovative approaches and
antigen probes to assess polyfunctional T cell responses and geminal center (GC) B cell response. This research
is significant as it directly addresses multiple NIAID priorities in their strategic plan for developing a universal
influenza vaccine. The results of these studies could have a significant impact as the universal influenza vaccines
developed should be suitable for advancement to pre-clinical studies. Moreover, the adjuvants and approaches
developed in this proposal will be applicable to other vaccines and study of the host response to influenza
infection, and will have broader impacts beyond universal influenza vaccine development.