Kinga K. Smolen
University of British Columbia
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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology | 2013
Brian Reikie; Shalena Naidoo; Candice E. Ruck; Amy L. Slogrove; Corena de Beer; Heleen la Grange; Rozanne C. M. Adams; Kevin Ho; Kinga K. Smolen; David P. Speert; Mark F. Cotton; Wolfgang Preiser; Monika Esser; Tobias R. Kollmann
ABSTRACT HIV-exposed but uninfected (HEU) infants born to HIV-infected mothers from areas in the world with a high burden of infectious disease suffer higher infectious morbidity and mortality than their HIV unexposed uninfected (HUU) peers. Vaccination provides protection from infection. The possibility exists that altered response to vaccination contributes to the higher rate of infection in HEU than in HUU infants. While short-term, cross-sectional studies support this notion, it is unclear whether or not HEU infants develop long-term protective immune responses following the WHO extended program on immunization (EPI). Vaccine-specific antibody responses were compared between HEU and HUU infants from 2 weeks until 2 years of age in a longitudinal South African cohort. Total IgG and antibodies specific for Bordetella pertussis, Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib), tetanus toxoid, hepatitis B virus (HepB), and measles virus were measured at multiple time points throughout the first 2 years of life. Prevaccine antibodies (maternal antibodies passively acquired) specific for tetanus were lower in HEU than in HUU infants, while prevaccine antibodies to HepB were higher in HEU than in HUU infants. Both groups responded similarly to tetanus, Hib, and HepB vaccination. HEU demonstrated stronger pertussis vaccine responses, developing protective titers 1 year earlier than HUU patients, and maintained higher anti-tetanus titers at 24 months of age. Vaccine-induced antibodies to measles virus were similar in both groups at all time points. Our results suggest that the current EPI vaccination program as practiced in South Africa leads to the development of vaccine-specific antibody responses that are equivalent in HEU and HUU infants. However, our data also suggest that a large fraction of both HEU and HUU South African infants have antibody titers for several infectious threats that remain below the level of protection for much of their first 2 years of life.
Vaccine | 2012
Kinga K. Smolen; Laura Gelinas; Lisa Franzen; Simon Dobson; Meena Dawar; Gina Ogilvie; Mel Krajden; Edgardo S. Fortuno; Tobias R. Kollmann
Vaccination is one of the most effective medical interventions. However, optimization of existing as well as design of new vaccines is still mostly conducted empirically; a rational approach to vaccine design is largely prohibited by the lack of insight into the relevant mechanisms underlying immune-mediated protection. To delineate the impact of variables on immune memory formation following vaccination, we took advantage of a trial assessing the role of the age of the recipient and the number of administered doses of the quadrivalent HPV vaccine in a well-characterized longitudinal cohort of girls and young women. We found that age of the recipient and the number of doses administered differentially impact the development of B and T cell memory. Specifically, age of the recipient significantly impacted generation of HPV 18-specific B cell memory, while the number of vaccine doses displayed a significant effect on the development of HPV-specific T cell memory. Our data indicate that rational design of vaccines has to be tailored according to the desired induction of B and/or T cell memory.
The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014
Kinga K. Smolen; Candice E. Ruck; Edgardo S. Fortuno; Kevin Ho; Pedro P. Dimitriu; William W. Mohn; David P. Speert; Philip J. Cooper; Monika Esser; Tessa Goetghebuer; Arnaud Marchant; Tobias R. Kollmann
Background Susceptibility to infection as well as response to vaccination varies among populations. To date, the underlying mechanisms responsible for these clinical observations have not been fully delineated. Because innate immunity instructs adaptive immunity, we hypothesized that differences between populations in innate immune responses may represent a mechanistic link to variation in susceptibility to infection or response to vaccination. Objective Determine whether differences in innate immune responses exist among infants from different continents of the world. Methods We determined the innate cytokine response following pattern recognition receptor (PRR) stimulation of whole blood from 2-year-old infants across 4 continents (Africa, North America, South America, and Europe). Results We found that despite the many possible genetic and environmental exposure differences in infants across 4 continents, innate cytokine responses were similar for infants from North America, South America, and Europe. However, cells from South African infants secreted significantly lower levels of cytokines than did cells from infants from the 3 other sites, and did so following stimulation of extracellular and endosomal but not cytosolic PRRs. Conclusions Substantial differences in innate cytokine responses to PRR stimulation exist among different populations of infants that could not have been predicted. Delineating the underlying mechanism(s) for these differences will not only aid in improving vaccine-mediated protection but possibly also provide clues for the susceptibility to infection in different regions of the world.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2016
Bahaa Abu-Raya; Kinga K. Smolen; Fabienne Willems; Tobias R. Kollmann; Arnaud Marchant
The transfer of maternal immune factors to the newborn is critical for protection from infectious disease in early life. Maternally acquired passive immunity provides protection until the infant is beyond early life’s increased susceptibility to severe infections or until active immunity is achieved following infant’s primary immunization. However, as reviewed here, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection alters the transfer of immune factors from HIV-infected mothers to the HIV-exposed newborns and young infants. This may relate to the immune activation in HIV-infected pregnant women, associated with the production of inflammatory cytokines at the maternofetal interface associated with inflammatory responses in the newborn. We also summarize mother-targeting interventions to improve the health of infants born to HIV-infected women, such as immunization during pregnancy and reduction of maternal inflammation. Maternal immunization offers the potential to compensate for the decreased transplacentally transferred maternal antibodies observed in HIV-exposed infants. Current data suggest reduced immunogenicity of vaccines in HIV-infected pregnant women, possibly reducing the protective impact of maternal immunization for HIV-exposed infants. Fortunately, levels of antibodies appear preserved in the breast milk of HIV-infected women, which supports the recommendation to breast-feed during antiretroviral treatment to protect HIV-exposed infants.
Journal of Immunology | 2014
Kinga K. Smolen; Bing Cai; Laura Gelinas; Edgardo S. Fortuno; Martin Larsen; David P. Speert; Mustapha Chamekh; Philip J. Cooper; Monika Esser; Arnaud Marchant; Tobias R. Kollmann
Innate immunity instructs adaptive immunity, and suppression of innate immunity is associated with an increased risk for infection. We showed previously that whole-blood cellular components from a cohort of South African children secreted significantly lower levels of most cytokines following stimulation of pattern recognition receptors compared with whole blood from cohorts of Ecuadorian, Belgian, or Canadian children. To begin dissecting the responsible molecular mechanisms, we set out to identify the relevant cellular source of these differences. Across the four cohorts represented in our study, we identified significant variation in the cellular composition of whole blood; however, a significant reduction in the intracellular cytokine production on the single-cell level was only detected in South African children’s monocytes, conventional dendritic cells, and plasmacytoid dendritic cells. We also uncovered a marked reduction in polyfunctionality for each of these cellular compartments in South African children compared with children from the other continents. Together, our data identify differences in cell composition, as well as profoundly lower functional responses of innate cells, in our cohort of South African children. A possible link between altered innate immunity and increased risk for infection or lower response to vaccines in South African infants needs to be explored.
Vaccine | 2010
Brian Reikie; Kinga K. Smolen; Edgardo S. Fortuno; Daniela I.M. Loeffler; Bing Cai; Darren Blimkie; Tobias R. Kollmann
Most existing vaccines do not induce protective immunity immediately following birth, nor do they retain protective efficacy in the latter years of life without booster doses. Using a mouse model, we present evidence that a live-replicating vaccine administered only once shortly after birth was able to induce both immediate and lifelong protection. Newborn mice immunized with a safe, highly attenuated strain of Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) were already protected by day 7 post-vaccination when challenged with a virulent strain of Lm. Furthermore, all mice remained fully protected for 2 years after only a single immunization. Vaccine-specific T cell immune responses were still detectable 2 years later, indicating long-lived immune memory even in neonatal vaccine recipients. Analysis of memory precursor subsets, specific for antigens homologous to Lm or a model vaccine (Ova), demonstrated remarkable similarity between adult and neonatal vaccine recipient effector and central memory CD8 T cell development. The magnitude of expansion of antigen specific memory T cells post-infectious challenge correlated with protection in both groups. This is the first direct evidence that vaccination--even in the absence of a booster dose--is capable of inducing immediate and lifelong protective immune memory regardless of age at the time of initial vaccination.
Vaccine | 2009
Daniela I.M. Loeffler; Kinga K. Smolen; Laura Aplin; Bing Cai; Tobias R. Kollmann
We have developed virulence-attenuated strains of Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) that can be used as safe yet effective vaccine carriers for neonatal vaccination. Here we compare the vaccine efficacy of Lm based vaccine carrier candidates after only a single immunization in murine neonates and adults: Lm Delta(trpS actA) based strains that express and secrete multiple copies of the model antigen ovalbumin (OVA) either under the control of a phagosomal (P(hly)) or cytosolic (P(actA))-driven listerial promoter. While both strains induced high levels of antigen-specific primary and secondary CD8 and CD4 T cell responses, both neonatal and adult mice immunized with the phagosomal driven strain were significantly better protected against wildtype Lm challenge as compared to the naïve control group than mice immunized with the cytosolic driven strains. Interestingly, only neonatal mice immunized with the phagosomal driven strains generated high IgG antibody responses against OVA. Our phagosomal driven Lm-based vaccine platform presents the broadest (cellular & humoral response) and most efficient (highly protective) vaccine platform for neonatal vaccination yet described.
Vaccine | 2009
Kinga K. Smolen; Daniela I.M. Loeffler; Brian Reikie; Laura Aplin; Bing Cai; Edgardo S. Fortuno; Tobias R. Kollmann
Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) holds promise as a neonatal vaccine vehicle. Here we show that Lm immunized neonatal mice reached maximal Ag-specific CD8(+) T cell expansion after only a single immunization, while adults required two doses. Ag-specific CD4(+) T cell expansion in both age groups required a boost to reach its peak. Neither functional avidity, sensitivity, nor the TCR-Vbeta repertoire of the Ag-specific T cells differed between mice immunized as neonates or adults. Lastly, neonatal immunization did not decrease protection or preclude a booster response. Overall, our data provide further evidence in support of immunization at birth as a feasible public health strategy to combat early life infections.
Clinical Infectious Diseases | 2018
Tessa Goetghebuer; Kinga K. Smolen; Catherine Adler; Jishnu Das; Trevor McBride; Gaby Smits; Sandra Lecomte; Edwige Haelterman; Patricia Barlow; Pedro A. Piedra; Fiona R. M. van der Klis; Tobias R. Kollmann; Douglas A. Lauffenburger; Galit Alter; Jack Levy; Arnaud Marchant
BACKGROUND Epidemiological studies conducted in low- and high-income countries showed that infants exposed to maternal human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) have a high risk of severe infections. Immune alterations during fetal life have been proposed as a possible mechanism. METHODS This prospective study assessed the relative risk of hospitalization for infection in HIV-exposed uninfected (HEU) infants as compared to HIV-unexposed (HU) infants born in a high-income country (HIC). Markers of monocyte activation and levels of pathogen-specific antibodies were measured at birth to identify correlates of infant susceptibility. RESULTS There were 27 of 132 HEU infants and 14 of 123 HU infants hospitalized for infection during the first year of life (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 2.33, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.10-4.97). Most of this increased risk was associated with the time of initiation of maternal antiretroviral therapy (ART). As compared to HU infants, the risk of hospitalization for infection of HEU infants was 4-fold higher when mothers initiated ART during pregnancy (aHR 3.84, 95% CI 1.69-8.71) and was not significantly increased when ART was initiated before pregnancy (aHR 1.42, 95% CI 0.58-3.48). The activation of newborn monocytes and the reduced transfer of maternal antibodies were most intense following ART initiation during pregnancy, and predicted the risk of infant hospitalization. CONCLUSIONS These observations indicate that initiation of maternal ART before pregnancy reduces the susceptibility of HEU infants born in a HIC to severe infections, and that this effect could be related to the prevention of immune alterations during fetal life.
Cytometry Part A | 2017
Kinga K. Smolen; Bing Cai; Tobias R. Kollmann
PROFILING the innate immune system of young children in a state of health and disease, is an important but arduous task, plagued with restrictions and limitations. Once blood samples are obtained, no matter how limited in volume, they are extremely precious. Therefore great care and consideration must be taken in how these samples are assayed. The purpose of the panel presented here is to assess the innate immune response in whole blood after Toll-like receptor (TLR) ligand or cytokine stimulation, at the single-cell level. In addition to the identification of many of the innate and innateadaptive interface immune cell subsets, this panel also enables the detection of key intracellular cytokines involved in the immune response. This panel was optimized for the evaluation of TLR-ligand and cytokine stimulated whole blood, which has been fixed and frozen, prior to flow cytometric analysis to allow batched analysis to reduce technical artifacts. The panel presented here is an expansion of a panel previously described in Refs. (1–4), but expanded here to capture most of the major innate immune subsets found in peripheral blood and their key functional cytokines. Although the specific application of this panel was to identify the baseline difference between groups of healthy children, shown in Ref. (5), this panel is readily applied to a wide range of normal and diseased-states in humans.