Medical College of Wisconsin
CTSICores SearchResearch InformaticsREDCap

Whole Transcriptome Profiling Identifies CD93 and Other Plasma Cell Survival Factor Genes Associated with Measles-Specific Antibody Response after Vaccination. PLoS One 2016;11(8):e0160970

Date

08/17/2016

Pubmed ID

27529750

Pubmed Central ID

PMC4987012

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0160970

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-84984830272 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   17 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There are insufficient system-wide transcriptomic (or other) data that help explain the observed inter-individual variability in antibody titers after measles vaccination in otherwise healthy individuals.

METHODS: We performed a transcriptome(mRNA-Seq)-profiling study after in vitro viral stimulation of PBMCs from 30 measles vaccine recipients, selected from a cohort of 764 schoolchildren, based on the highest and lowest antibody titers. We used regression and network biology modeling to define markers associated with neutralizing antibody response.

RESULTS: We identified 39 differentially expressed genes that demonstrate significant differences between the high and low antibody responder groups (p-value≤0.0002, q-value≤0.092), including the top gene CD93 (p<1.0E-13, q<1.0E-09), encoding a receptor required for antigen-driven B-cell differentiation, maintenance of immunoglobulin production and preservation of plasma cells in the bone marrow. Network biology modeling highlighted plasma cell survival (CD93, IL6, CXCL12), chemokine/cytokine activity and cell-cell communication/adhesion/migration as biological processes associated with the observed differential response in the two responder groups.

CONCLUSION: We identified genes and pathways that explain in part, and are associated with, neutralizing antibody titers after measles vaccination. This new knowledge could assist in the identification of biomarkers and predictive signatures of protective immunity that may be useful in the design of new vaccine candidates and in clinical studies.

Author List

Haralambieva IH, Zimmermann MT, Ovsyannikova IG, Grill DE, Oberg AL, Kennedy RB, Poland GA

Author

Michael T. Zimmermann PhD Director, Assistant Professor in the Clinical and Translational Science Institute department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adolescent
Antibodies, Viral
Antibody Specificity
Cell Survival
Child
Cohort Studies
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Regulatory Networks
Humans
Male
Measles virus
Membrane Glycoproteins
Plasma Cells
Receptors, Complement
Vaccination
Young Adult