Transient decrease in human peripheral blood myeloid dendritic cells following influenza vaccination correlates with induction of serum antibody.
Dendritic cells (DC) are critical inducers of the adaptive immune response. Extensive characterization of tissue-resident and monocyte-derived DC has revealed diverse stimulatory and regulatory actions, although the role of peripheral blood dendritic cells (PBDC) in maintaining homeostasis remains unclear. Examination of various myeloid (CD11c+CD303-) and plasmacytoid (CD11c-CD303+) DC populations in the peripheral blood of seasonal trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine recipients revealed a transient decrease in the frequency of CD11c+CD1c- myeloid DC subsets 5-10 days following vaccination, including both CD141+ and CD141- myeloid DC subsets of this population. These populations rebounded by 1 month, while plasmacytoid DC remained stable. The magnitude of the decrease in the CD141+ myeloid DC subset at d5-7 significantly correlated with the induction of influenza specific serum antibodies measured at 1 month following vaccination. These results demonstrate a mobilization of peripheral blood myeloid DC following vaccination and indicate these cells are potential biomarkers of immune response.