iScience (Sep 2021)

Endoplasmic reticulum stress response and bile acid signatures associate with multi-strain seroresponsiveness during elderly influenza vaccination

  • Christophe Carre,
  • Glenn Wong,
  • Vipin Narang,
  • Crystal Tan,
  • Joni Chong,
  • Hui Xian Chin,
  • Weili Xu,
  • Yanxia Lu,
  • Michelle Chua,
  • Michael Poidinger,
  • Paul Tambyah,
  • Ma Nyunt,
  • Tze Pin Ng,
  • Daniel Larocque,
  • Catherine Hessler,
  • Nabil Bosco,
  • Laurence Quemeneur,
  • Anis Larbi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 9
p. 102970

Abstract

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Summary: The elderly are an important target for influenza vaccination, and the determination of factors that underlie immune responsiveness is clinically valuable. We evaluated the immune and metabolic profiles of 205 elderly Singaporeans administered with Vaxigrip. Despite high seroprotection rates, we observed heterogeneity in the response. We stratified the cohort into complete (CR) or incomplete responders (IR), where IR exhibited signs of accelerated T cell aging. We found a higher upregulation of genes associated with the B-cell endoplasmic-reticulum stress response in CR, where XBP-1 acts as a key upstream regulator. B-cells from IR were incapable of matching the level of XBP-1 upregulation observed in CR after inducing ER stress with tunicamycin in vitro. Metabolic signatures also distinguished CR and IR – as CR presented with a greater diversity of bile acids. Our findings suggest that the ER-stress pathway activation could improve influenza vaccination in the elderly.

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