Renewed
interest in studying influenza a viruses
The emergence of the avian
influenza virus H5N1 that is currently devastating chicken
flocks in many countries and threatening to unleash a
worldwide epidemic among humans has triggered a renewed
interest among scientists in studying influenza A viruses,
according to investigators at St. Jude Children's Research
Hospital.
This renewed interest could
lead to new discoveries of immune system response to viruses
that could lead to better drugs and vaccines, the
researchers write in a review article that appears in the
May issue of Nature Immunology.
"Until recently, many
immunologists were relatively uninterested in studying
influenza immunity because there were already effective
vaccines," said Peter Doherty, Ph.D., member of the St. Jude
Department of Immunology and co-recipient of the 1996 Nobel
Prize for Medicine. "The current resurgence of interest in
influenza immunology reflects the threat that H5N1 could
evolve into a virus that spreads easily among humans. Over
the years, influenza A viruses have been one of the most
important models for studying how the immune system responds
to viral infections. Further study of this virus and the
immune response to it will no doubt help us prepare for this
latest threat."
Influenza A viruses infect a
wide range of animals and cause influenza outbreaks among
humans. Scientists categorize influenza A viruses according
to the identity of two specific proteins on their surface,
HA and NA. There are 16 known subtypes of HA (H) proteins
and 9 subtypes of NA (N) proteins, which are used to name
the viruses, such as H5N1. The virus uses the HA protein to
attach itself to a cell it is about to infect. Newly made
viruses inside infected cells use NA to escape from the cell
and spread.
"Studies of influenza A led to
the design of Relenza and Tamiflu, two currently available
anti-flu drugs," said Paul Thomas, Ph.D., a postdoctoral
fellow in the St. Jude Department of Immunology and an
author of the article. "But the history of influenza shows
us that there is still a great deal more to learn about
them."
Influenza has occurred
throughout history, but the world became aware of its deadly
potential in 1918-19 when a pandemic--a worldwide
epidemic--seemed to strike out of nowhere. It killed some 40
million people--many more than the number killed in World
War I. This pandemic arose from a bird flu virus that
adapted to humans, an event that scientists fear could
happen with H5N1.
Although widespread influenza
pandemics did not erupt again until 1957 and 1968, there is
evidence that a virus resembling the 1957 strain was
circulating among humans as far back as 1888.
After the 1918-1919 pandemic,
immunologists learned that the immune system responds to
influenza A viruses in two basic ways. The first is to
stimulate the B lymphocytes that develop into
antibody-forming plasma cells. If a person has the "right"
antibodies in his or her blood as a consequence of being
vaccinated, that person is completely protected. On the
other hand, the CD8+ "killer" T lymphocytes, which attack
and kill cells infected by the virus, take longer to
respond, and the virus still replicates extensively before
the lymphocytes can do their job. Even before people realize
they have been infected, the flu viruses multiply rapidly in
the respiratory system and leap to nearby people in the fine
droplets of coughs or sneezes. This explains why yearly
human flu epidemics can seem to explode out of nowhere and
spread rapidly through a household and community before
fading away.
Moreover, the HA and NA
proteins of these viruses continually mutate, keeping a step
ahead of the posse of antibodies that seek to bring them
down. This molecular strategy, which forces scientists to
redesign the flu vaccine each year, is called antigenic
drift. An antigen is a molecule that triggers an immune
system attack.
In contrast, an antigenic shift
occurs when different viruses infect the same animal and
exchange genes. In 1957, a human H1N1 and avian H2N2
infected the same animal and swapped some genes--a process
called reassortment. The resulting viral offspring caused
that year's severe epidemic. According to the paper's
authors, even in the absence of a quick reassortment, the
right antigenic drift could give influenza A viruses the
ability to spread to new species, including humans.
The prospect of a human
pandemic of H5N1 is alarming considering what can happen to
people infected by this virus, according to the St. Jude
investigators. The immune system response to H5N1 can run
amok, with immune cells spewing out inflammatory chemicals
called cytokines in a "cytokine storm" that causes airways
to become inflamed and the alveoli to fill with fluid. The
result can be rapid death. According to the investigators,
this finding at least partially explains why so many young,
otherwise healthy people succumbed to the 1918-1919
pandemic, as do many victims of H5N1 today; their young,
healthy immune systems generate a strong cytokine storm.
However, breakthroughs in
understanding the details of the battle between the immune
system and influenza A viruses hold the promise of better
therapies and vaccines.
"A key challenge to
immunologists is learning how to exploit the exquisite
sensitivity of CD8+ cells to different targets on H5N1 and
other flu viruses," said Richard Webby, Ph.D., an assistant
member of the St. Jude Department of Infectious Diseases and
co-author of the paper. "We could use that knowledge to
design better vaccines."
Vaccines made of live viruses
like Flumist. Have the advantage of stimulating the memories
of previously alerted CD8+ T cells, according to the
authors. And, because these weakened viruses can still
replicate themselves in the body, lower doses are effective.
However, regardless of whether virus used as a vaccine is
alive or dead, the virus targeted by the vaccine can mutate
an immune system primed by that vaccine.
Therefore, the "Holy Grail" of
influenza vaccine is one that would target universal
antigens that appear on all flu viruses and that do not
readily mutate, according to the authors.
Even without a "Holy Grail"
vaccine, however, a vaccine that targets an antigen or
antigens that mutate could offer some protection, says
Webby. "H5N1 isn't a permanent infection, like HIV is," he
said. "So even partial control that limits the severity of
lung damage should allow the immune system to clear out the
virus and offer life-saving protection."
Another advantage would be that
even such partial protection would lessen the possibility
that the virus would jump to another person and spread the
infection.
"This clearly suggests that it
would be prudent to stockpile a vaccine that is specific for
one variant of the virus even if it loses some effectiveness
when a somewhat different variant arises due to mutation,"
Thomas added.