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641 result(s) for "Wright, Peter F"
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Primates and Philosophers : How Morality Evolved
\"Can virtuous behavior be explained by nature, and not by human rational choice? In Primates and philosophers, renowned primatologist Frans de Waal explores the biological foundations of one of humanity's most cherished traits: morality. Drawing on Darwin, recent scientific advances, and his extensive research of primate behavior, de Waal argues that modern-day evolutionary biology incorrectly reinforces our habit of labeling ethical behavior as humane and the less civilized as animalistic. His compelling account of how human morality evolved out of mammalian society will fascinate anyone who has ever wondered about the origins and reach of human goodness.\"--Page 4 of cover.
Common genetic susceptibility loci link PFAPA syndrome, Behçet’s disease, and recurrent aphthous stomatitis
Periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and cervical adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome is the most common periodic fever syndrome in children. The disease appears to cluster in families, but the pathogenesis is unknown. We queried two European–American cohorts and one Turkish cohort (total n = 231) of individuals with PFAPA for common variants previously associated with two other oropharyngeal ulcerative disorders, Behçet’s disease and recurrent aphthous stomatitis. In a metaanalysis, we found that a variant upstream of IL12A (rs17753641) is strongly associated with PFAPA (OR 2.13, P = 6 × 10−9). We demonstrated that monocytes from individuals who are heterozygous or homozygous for this risk allele produce significantly higher levels of IL-12p70 upon IFN-γ and LPS stimulation than those from individuals without the risk allele. We also found that variants near STAT4, IL10, and CCR1-CCR3 were significant susceptibility loci for PFAPA, suggesting that the pathogenesis of PFAPA involves abnormal antigen-presenting cell function and T cell activity and polarization, thereby implicating both innate and adaptive immune responses at the oropharyngeal mucosa. Our results illustrate genetic similarities among recurrent aphthous stomatitis, PFAPA, and Behçet’s disease, placing these disorders on a common spectrum, with recurrent aphthous stomatitis on the mild end, Behçet’s disease on the severe end, and PFAPA intermediate. We propose naming these disorders Behçet’s spectrum disorders to highlight their relationship. HLA alleles may be factors that influence phenotypes along this spectrum as we found new class I and II HLA associations for PFAPA distinct from Behçet’s disease and recurrent aphthous stomatitis.
Global burden of acute lower respiratory infections due to respiratory syncytial virus in young children: a systematic review and meta-analysis
The global burden of disease attributable to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) remains unknown. We aimed to estimate the global incidence of and mortality from episodes of acute lower respiratory infection (ALRI) due to RSV in children younger than 5 years in 2005. We estimated the incidence of RSV-associated ALRI in children younger than 5 years, stratified by age, using data from a systematic review of studies published between January, 1995, and June, 2009, and ten unpublished population-based studies. We estimated possible boundaries for RSV-associated ALRI mortality by combining case fatality ratios with incidence estimates from hospital-based reports from published and unpublished studies and identifying studies with population-based data for RSV seasonality and monthly ALRI mortality. In 2005, an estimated 33·8 (95% CI 19·3–46·2) million new episodes of RSV-associated ALRI occurred worldwide in children younger than 5 years (22% of ALRI episodes), with at least 3·4 (2·8–4·3) million episodes representing severe RSV-associated ALRI necessitating hospital admission. We estimated that 66 000–199 000 children younger than 5 years died from RSV-associated ALRI in 2005, with 99% of these deaths occurring in developing countries. Incidence and mortality can vary substantially from year to year in any one setting. Globally, RSV is the most common cause of childhood ALRI and a major cause of admission to hospital as a result of severe ALRI. Mortality data suggest that RSV is an important cause of death in childhood from ALRI, after pneumococcal pneumonia and Haemophilus influenzae type b. The development of novel prevention and treatment strategies should be accelerated as a priority. WHO; Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Distinct Features and Functions of Systemic and Mucosal Humoral Immunity Among SARS-CoV-2 Convalescent Individuals
Understanding humoral immune responses to SARS-CoV-2 infection will play a critical role in the development of vaccines and antibody-based interventions. We report systemic and mucosal antibody responses in convalescent individuals who experienced varying severity of disease. Whereas assessment of neutralization and antibody-mediated effector functions revealed polyfunctional antibody responses in serum, only robust neutralization and phagocytosis were apparent in nasal wash samples. Serum neutralization and effector functions correlated with systemic SARS-CoV-2-specific IgG response magnitude, while mucosal neutralization was associated with nasal SARS-CoV-2-specific IgA. Antibody depletion experiments support the mechanistic relevance of these correlations. Associations between nasal IgA responses, virus neutralization at the mucosa, and less severe disease suggest the importance of assessing mucosal immunity in larger natural infection cohorts. Further characterization of antibody responses at the portal of entry may define their ability to contribute to protection from infection or reduced risk of hospitalization, informing public health assessment strategies and vaccine development efforts.
Generation and Protective Ability of Influenza Virus–Specific Antibody-Dependent Cellular Cytotoxicity in Humans Elicited by Vaccination, Natural Infection, and Experimental Challenge
Background. Nonneutralizing antibodies (Abs) involved in antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) may provide some protection from influenza virus infection. The ability of influenza vaccines to induce ADCC-mediating Abs (ADCC-Abs) in adults and children is unclear. Methods. We quantified ADCC-Abs in serum samples from adults who received a dose of inactivated subunit vaccine (ISV) targeting monovalent 2009 pandemic influenza A(H1N1) virus or live-attenuated influenza vaccine (LAIV) or who had laboratory-confirmed influenza A(H1N1) virus infection. We also measured ADCC-Abs in children who either received a dose of trivalent seasonal ISV followed by trivalent seasonal LAIV or 2 doses of LAIV. Finally, we assessed the ability of low and high ADCC-Ab titers to protect adults from experimental challenge with influenza A/Wisconsin/67/131/2005(H3N2) virus. Results. Adults and children who received a dose of ISV had a robust increase in ADCC-Ab titers to both recombinant hemagglutinin (rHA) protein and homologous virus-infected cells. There was no detectable increase in titers of ADCC-Abs to rHA or virus-infected cells in adults and children who received LAIV. Higher titers (≥320) of preexisting ADCC-Abs were associated with lower virus replication and a significant reduction in total symptom scores in experimentally infected adults. Conclusions. ADCC-Ab titers increased following experimental influenza virus infection in adults and after ISV administration in both children and adults.
Effects of schistosomes on host anti-viral immune response and the acquisition, virulence, and prevention of viral infections: A systematic review
Although a growing number of studies suggest interactions between Schistosoma parasites and viral infections, the effects of schistosome infections on the host response to viruses have not been evaluated comprehensively. In this systematic review, we investigated how schistosomes impact incidence, virulence, and prevention of viral infections in humans and animals. We also evaluated immune effects of schistosomes in those coinfected with viruses. We screened 4,730 studies and included 103. Schistosomes may increase susceptibility to some viruses, including HIV and Kaposi’s sarcoma-associated herpesvirus, and virulence of hepatitis B and C viruses. In contrast, schistosome infection may be protective in chronic HIV, Human T-cell Lymphotropic Virus-Type 1, and respiratory viruses, though further research is needed. Schistosome infections were consistently reported to impair immune responses to hepatitis B and possibly measles vaccines. Understanding the interplay between schistosomes and viruses has ramifications for anti-viral vaccination strategies and global control of viral infections.
Safety and immunogenicity of novel live attenuated type 1 and type 3 oral poliomyelitis vaccines in healthy adults in the USA: a first-in-human, observer-masked, multicentre, phase 1 randomised controlled trial
Reducing the risks of vaccine-derived polioviruses and vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis motivated the development of novel types 1 and 3 oral poliovirus vaccines (nOPV1 and nOPV3, respectively), designed to have similar safety and immunogenicity and improved genetic stability (to reduce risk of reversion to neurovirulence) relative to types 1 or 3 Sabin-strain OPVs. We aimed to assess the safety and immunogenicity of nOPV1 and nOPV3 in healthy adults. We did a first-in-human, observer-masked, multicentre, phase 1 randomised controlled trial in healthy adults at four centres in the USA. Participants were block randomised, stratified by site and according to polio vaccination history (inactivated poliovirus vaccine [IPV] only [hereafter IPV participants] or regimens including OPV [hereafter OPV participants]), and randomly assigned to receive either nOPV or homotypic Sabin-strain monovalent OPV (mOPV). IPV participants received a single dose of nOPV1 or mOPV1 (cohort 1) or nOPV3 or mOPV3 (cohort 3) and OPV participants received two doses 28 days apart of nOPV1 or mOPV1 (cohort 2) or nOPV3 or mOPV3 (cohort 4). The primary outcome was safety among vaccinated participants. Secondary outcomes included homotypic serum neutralising antibody responses measured before and 28 days after each dose in a per-protocol population, and faecal viral shedding mainly in IPV participants assessed up to 56 days following each dose among vaccinated participants. This study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04529538) and is complete. Between May 6, 2021 and Feb 17, 2023, 377 individuals were assessed for eligibility, 226 were randomly assigned, and 205 receive at least one dose of nOPV1 (n=70), mOPV1 (n=45), nOPV3 (n=54), or mOPV3 (n=36). No serious adverse events were observed. Most adverse events were mild, severe events were rare, and solicited events were balanced across groups. Severe solicited events were predominantly fatigue, occurring in 1–4% of participants across all groups except for mOPV1 recipients in whom no such events were reported, and one case of nausea and vomiting in an mOPV1 recipient, and one case of abdominal pain in an nOPV1 recipient. Two (3%) participants in the nOPV1 groups (one reporting severe fatigue, headache, and myalgia, and one reporting abdominal pain) and one (2%) participant in the mOPV1 groups (kidney infection) reported a severe unsolicited adverse event within 28 days. Homotypic seroprotection was nearly 100% at baseline and was 100% 28 days after the first dose. Homotypic seroconversion rates after a single dose were high and similar for nOPV and mOPV (ranging from 86% to 100% for nOPV and from 86% to 93% for mOPV). Similar rates of viral shedding were observed among participants receiving nOPV or mOPV. Peak viral shedding rate detected via PCR among IPV participants was 100% on day 8 after a dose, across groups. nOPV1 and nOPV3 were well tolerated and showed similar immunogenicity and shedding profiles to mOPV1 and mOPV3, respectively, supporting progression of these vaccine candidates to phase 2 studies. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Vaccination of SARS-CoV-2-infected individuals expands a broad range of clonally diverse affinity-matured B cell lineages
Vaccination of SARS-CoV-2 convalescent individuals generates broad and potent antibody responses. Here, we isolate 459 spike-specific monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) from two individuals who were infected with the index variant of SARS-CoV-2 and later boosted with mRNA-1273. We characterize mAb genetic features by sequence assignments to the donors’ personal immunoglobulin genotypes and assess antibody neutralizing activities against index SARS-CoV-2, Beta, Delta, and Omicron variants. The mAbs used a broad range of immunoglobulin heavy chain ( IGH ) V genes in the response to all sub-determinants of the spike examined, with similar characteristics observed in both donors. IGH repertoire sequencing and B cell lineage tracing at longitudinal time points reveals extensive evolution of SARS-CoV-2 spike-binding antibodies from acute infection until vaccination five months later. These results demonstrate that highly polyclonal repertoires of affinity-matured memory B cells are efficiently recalled by vaccination, providing a basis for the potent antibody responses observed in convalescent persons following vaccination. Here, the authors isolated and characterized genetic features of spike-specific monoclonal antibodies. They show how the antibodies evolve from infection to after vaccination and conclude that highly polyclonal repertoires of affinity-matured memory B cells are efficiently recalled by vaccination.
Safety and immunogenicity of an oral, replicating adenovirus serotype 4 vector vaccine for H5N1 influenza: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 1 study
Replication-competent virus vector vaccines might have advantages compared with non-replicating vector vaccines. We tested the safety and immunogenicity of an oral adenovirus serotype 4 vector vaccine candidate (Ad4-H5-Vtn) expressing the haemagglutinin from an avian influenza A H5N1 virus. We did this phase 1 study at four sites in the USA. We used a computer-generated randomisation list (block size eight, stratified by site) to assign healthy volunteers aged 18–40 years to receive one of five doses of Ad4-H5-Vtn (107 viral particles [VP], 108 VP, 109 VP, 1010 VP, 1011 VP) or placebo (3:1). Vaccine or placebo was given on three occasions, about 56 days apart. Participants, investigators, and study-site personnel were masked to assignment throughout the study. Subsequently, volunteers received a boost dose with 90 μg of an inactivated parenteral H5N1 vaccine. Primary immunogenicity endpoints were seroconversion by haemagglutination-inhibition (HAI), defined as a four-times rise compared with baseline titre, and HAI geometric mean titre (GMT). We solicited symptoms of reactogenicity daily for 7 days after each vaccination and recorded symptoms that persisted beyond 7 days as adverse events. Primary analysis was per protocol. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01006798. We enrolled 166 participants (125 vaccine; 41 placebo) between Oct 19, 2009, and Sept 9, 2010. HAI responses were low: 13 of 123 vaccinees (11%, 95% CI 6–17) and three of 41 placebo recipients (7%, 2–20) seroconverted. HAI GMT was 6 (95% CI 5–7) for vaccinees, and 5 (5–6) for placebo recipients. However, when inactivated H5N1 vaccine became available, one H5N1 boost was offered to all participants. In this substudy, HAI seroconversion occurred in 19 of 19 participants in the 1011 VP cohort (100%; 95% CI 82–100) and eight of 22 placebo recipients (36%; 17–59); 17 of 19 participants in the 1011 VP cohort (89%; 67–99) achieved seroprotection compared with four of 22 placebo recipients (18%; 5–40); GMT was 135 (89–205) with 1011 VP, compared with 13 (7–21) with placebo. The cumulative frequency of abdominal pain, diarrhoea, and nasal congestion after all three vaccinations was significantly higher in vaccinees than placebo recipients (21 [16·8%] of 125 vs one [2·4%] of 41, p=0·017; 24 [19·2%] of 125 vs two [4·9%] of 41, p=0·027; 41 [32·8%] of 125 vs six [14·6%] of 41, p=0·028; respectively). No serious treatment-related adverse events occurred. Oral Ad4 vector priming might enhance the efficacy of poorly immunogenic vaccines such as H5N1. Wellcome Trust Foundation, PaxVax.
Systematic comparison of respiratory syncytial virus-induced memory B cell responses in two anatomical compartments
Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) is a leading cause of hospitalization in infants and young children. Although it is widely agreed that an RSV vaccine should induce both mucosal and systemic antibody responses, little is known about the B cell response to RSV in mucosa-associated lymphoid tissues. Here, we analyze this response by isolating 806 RSV F-specific antibodies from paired adenoid and peripheral blood samples from 4 young children. Overall, the adenoid-derived antibodies show higher binding affinities and neutralization potencies compared to antibodies isolated from peripheral blood. Approximately 25% of the neutralizing antibodies isolated from adenoids originate from a unique population of IgM + and/or IgD + memory B cells that contain a high load of somatic mutations but lack expression of classical memory B cell markers. Altogether, the results provide insight into the local B cell response to RSV and have implications for the development of vaccines that stimulate potent mucosal responses. Here, the authors isolate over 800 RSV F-specific antibodies from paired nasopharyngeal tonsil and peripheral blood samples from four young children undergoing adenoidectomy and find that adenoid derived antibodies have overall higher binding affinities and neutralization potencies.