-

nihao guest [ sign in / register ]
2025-12-5 16:15:11


Sang Y, Nahashon SN, Webby RJ. Microbiome-Immune Interaction and Harnessing for Next-Generation Vaccines Against Highly Pathogenic Avian Influenza in Poultry. Vaccines (Basel). 2025 Aug 6;13(8):837
submited by kickingbird at Aug, 29, 2025 9:14 AM from Vaccines (Basel). 2025 Aug 6;13(8):837

Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) remains a persistent threat to global poultry production and public health. Current vaccine platforms show limited cross-clade efficacy and often fail to induce mucosal immunity. Recent advances in microbiome research reveal critical roles for gut commensals in modulating vaccine-induced immunity, including enhancement of mucosal IgA production, CD8+ T-cell activation, and modulation of systemic immune responses. Engineered commensal bacteria such as Lactococcus lactis, Bacteroides ovatus, Bacillus subtilis, and Staphylococcus epidermidis have emerged as promising live vectors for antigen delivery. Postbiotic and synbiotic strategies further enhance protective efficacy through targeted modulation of the gut microbiota. Additionally, artificial intelligence (AI)-driven tools enable predictive modeling of host-microbiome interactions, antigen design optimization, and early detection of viral antigenic drift. These integrative technologies offer a new framework for mucosal, broadly protective, and field-deployable vaccines for HPAI control. However, species-specific microbiome variation, ecological safety concerns, and scalable manufacturing remain critical challenges. This review synthesizes emerging evidence on microbiome-immune crosstalk, commensal vector platforms, and AI-enhanced vaccine development, emphasizing the urgent need for One Health integration to mitigate zoonotic adaptation and pandemic emergence.

See Also:

Latest articles in those days:

[Go Top]    [Close Window]

Related Pages:
Learn about the flu news, articles, events and more
Subscribe to the weekly F.I.C newsletter!


  

Site map  |   Contact us  |  Term of use  |  FAQs |  粤ICP备10094839号-1
Copyright ©www.flu.org.cn. 2004-2025. All Rights Reserved. Powered by FIC 4.0.1
  Email:webmaster@flu.org.cn