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The Intersection of Age and Influenza Severity: Utility of Ferrets for Dissecting the Age-Dependent Immune Responses and Relevance to Age-Specific Vaccine Development

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v13040678

Keywords

ferret; preclinical model; influenza; respiratory viruses; age-related disease; risk-factors; host response; immune response; correlate of disease; correlate of protection

Categories

Funding

  1. Canadian 2019 Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Rapid Research Funding initiative the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [OV5-170349, VRI-172779, OV2-170357]
  2. Atlantic Genome/Genome Canada, Scotiabank COVID-19 IMPACT grant
  3. Nova Scotia COVID-19 Health Research Coalition
  4. IWK Graduate studentship from the IWK Health Center, Halifax, Nova Scotia (ROMEO) [1024578]
  5. Canada Foundation for Innovation through the Major Science Initiatives Fund
  6. Government of Saskatchewan through Innovation Saskatchewan
  7. Ministry of Agriculture

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Factors such as host age and virus strain play significant roles in impacting the host response to influenza virus infection. Ferrets, as a research model, are able to reflect human sensitivity to different viral strains at various stages of aging.
Many factors impact the host response to influenza virus infection and vaccination. Ferrets have been an indispensable reagent for influenza virus research for almost one hundred years. One of the most significant and well-known factors affecting human disease after infection is host age. Another significant factor is the virus, as strain-specific disease severity is well known. Studying age-related impacts on viral infection and vaccination outcomes requires an animal model that reflects both the physiological and immunological changes that occur with human aging, and sensitivity to differentially virulent influenza viruses. The ferret is uniquely susceptible to a plethora of influenza viruses impacting humans and has proven extremely useful in studying the clinical and immunological pictures of influenza virus infection. Moreover, ferrets developmentally have several of the age-related physiological changes that occur in humans throughout infancy, adulthood, old age, and pregnancy. In this review, we discuss ferret susceptibility to influenza viruses, summarize previous influenza studies using ferrets as models of age, and finally, highlight the application of ferret age models in the pursuit of prophylactic and therapeutic agents to address age-related influenza disease severity.

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