Title | Rhinoviruses A and C elicit long-lasting antibody responses with limited cross-neutralization. | ||
Author | Bochkov, Yury A; Devries, Mark; Tetreault, Kaitlin; Gangnon, Ronald; Lee, Sujin; Bacharier, Leonard B; Busse, William W; Camargo, Carlos A; Choi, Timothy; Cohen, Robyn; De, Ramyani; DeMuri, Gregory P; Fitzpatrick, Anne M; Gergen, Peter J; Grindle, Kristine; Gruchalla, Rebecca; Hartert, Tina; Hasegawa, Kohei; Khurana Hershey, Gurjit K; Holt, Patrick; Homil, Kiara; Jartti, Tuomas; Kattan, Meyer; Kercsmar, Carolyn; Kim, Haejin; Laing, Ingrid A; Le Souef, Peter N; Liu, Andrew H; Mauger, David T; Pappas, Tressa; Patel, Shilpa J; Phipatanakul, Wanda; Pongracic, Jacqueline; Seroogy, Christine; Sly, Peter D; Tisler, Christopher; Wald, Ellen R; Wood, Robert; Lemanske, Robert F Jr; Jackson, Daniel J; Gern, James E | ||
Journal | J Med Virol | Publication Year/Month | 2023-Aug |
PMID | 37638498 | PMCID | PMC10484091 |
Affiliation + expend | 1.University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA. |
Rhinoviruses (RVs) can cause severe wheezing illnesses in young children and patients with asthma. Vaccine development has been hampered by the multitude of RV types with little information about cross-neutralization. We previously showed that neutralizing antibody (nAb) responses to RV-C are detected twofold to threefold more often than those to RV-A throughout childhood. Based on those findings, we hypothesized that RV-C infections are more likely to induce either cross-neutralizing or longer-lasting antibody responses compared with RV-A infections. We pooled RV diagnostic data from multiple studies of children with respiratory illnesses and compared the expected versus observed frequencies of sequential infections with RV-A or RV-C types using log-linear regression models. We tested longitudinally collected plasma samples from children to compare the duration of RV-A versus RV-C nAb responses. Our models identified limited reciprocal cross-neutralizing relationships for RV-A (A12-A75, A12-A78, A20-A78, and A75-A78) and only one for RV-C (C2-C40). Serologic analysis using reference mouse sera and banked human plasma samples confirmed that C40 infections induced nAb responses with modest heterotypic activity against RV-C2. Mixed-effects regression modeling of longitudinal human plasma samples collected from ages 2 to 18 years demonstrated that RV-A and RV-C illnesses induced nAb responses of similar duration. These results indicate that both RV-A and RV-C nAb responses have only modest cross-reactivity that is limited to genetically similar types. Contrary to our initial hypothesis, RV-C species may include even fewer cross-neutralizing types than RV-A, whereas the duration of nAb responses during childhood is similar between the two species. The modest heterotypic responses suggest that RV vaccines must have a broad representation of prevalent types.