Clinical Study Aims to Identify Early Molecular and Biological Signatures of Vitiligo

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UMass Chan Medical School
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Clinical Study Aims to Identify Early Molecular and Biological Signatures of Vitiligo
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Food Allergy Rate Is Highest Among Hispanic, Black and Asian Individuals

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Northwestern Medicine
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Food Allergy Rate Is Highest Among Hispanic, Black and Asian Individuals
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People Who Preserve "Immune Resilience" Live Longer, Resist Infections

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The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio
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People Who Preserve "Immune Resilience" Live Longer, Resist Infections
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CHOP Researchers Develop Stable, Scalable Universal MHC Molecules

IU Researchers Receive $3.8 Million NIH Grant to Investigate Gene Therapies Used for Muscle Disorders

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Taming a Frenzied Immune System

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Find Funding to Discover Novel B Cell Epitopes

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If you can identify B cell epitopes and study antibody-mediated protective immunity, consider sending a proposal in response to NIAID’s renewed May 23, 2023, Innovations in Functional B Cell Epitope Discovery broad agency announcement (BAA) contract solicitation.

Scientific Overview

This program supports innovative research for high throughput discovery and validation of novel B cell epitopes associated with infectious pathogens or vaccines against them, autoimmune diseases, allergens, or human leukocyte antigen (HLA) epitopes associated with cell, organ, or tissue transplant rejection or tolerance.

Your proposal must focus on one of the following four topics:

  1. Infectious disease and/or vaccine responses, including pathogens with pandemic potential. 
  2. Autoimmune disease. This research area could also include the identification of pathogen-specific epitopes that are implicated in induction of autoimmune disease.
  3. Allergy to aeroallergens, food allergens, or drugs.
  4. Transplantation of cells, tissues, or organs.

You may submit separate proposals for different topics, but you are limited to only one proposal for each topic. The BAA does not support studies related to HIV.

This contract program will not support clinical trials. However, you may propose clinical research on human samples collected after, or as part of, standard of care interventions, or obtained from independently-funded clinical trials. You may also study samples from longitudinal observational studies that contribute to validation of candidate epitopes.

Check the BAA solicitation for full details on requirements for your overall program, each research area listed above, and more.

Contract Type, Budget, and Deadline

NIAID expects to issue multiple cost-reimbursement type completion contracts with an average annual total cost (direct and indirect costs combined) of $1.5 million each. However, the total cost may vary depending on the project’s scope and technical objectives. Propose a period of performance that reflects the complexity of the research, up to a maximum of 5 years.

Your proposal is due no later than September 20, 2023, 3 p.m. Eastern Time.

If you have any questions about the BAA, contact Deborah Blyveis, NIAID contracting officer, at blyveisd@niaid.nih.gov or 240-669-5143.

Contact Us

Email us at deaweb@niaid.nih.gov for help navigating NIAID’s grant and contract policies and procedures.

Apply for Funds to Study Immune Mechanisms at the Maternal-Fetal Interface

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NIAID seeks applications that propose to improve the understanding of the roles and interactions of immune cells at the maternal-fetal interface that support pregnancy and enable optimal placental development and function. Applications should also include studies that explore the contribution of immune dysregulation to gestational disorders, adverse pregnancy outcomes, and interactions between immune and non-immune cells that support a healthy pregnancy.

Apply for funding to investigate immune mechanisms at the maternal-fetal interface through the notice of funding opportunity (NOFO): Immune Mechanisms at the Maternal-Fetal Interface (R01, Clinical Trial Not Allowed).

Research Applications of Interest

We strongly encourage applicants to use human tissues and cells (e.g., cord blood to assess fetal immunity, placenta from term or premature birth pregnancies, banked tissues, or cells). These may include samples obtained from human subjects who received licensed vaccines or from independently funded completed or ongoing clinical trials.

You may use relevant animal models to elucidate immune mechanisms during natural infection, environmental exposures, or challenge studies. Provide a rationale and justification for your use of animal models, including the age and timeframe selected for evaluation.

You may also include studies of early post-natal immune system development and function (i.e., up to 6 months of age in humans and a relevant early postnatal age in proposed animal models).

Examples of NIAID-relevant project topics include but are not limited to:

  • Identifying mechanisms of induction, activation, and regulation of leukocyte responses and maintenance of homeostasis at the maternal-fetal interface.
  • Defining the role of immune cells in placental tissue remodeling, blood vessel formation, or endometrial stromal cell transformation.
  • Delineating the effect of infection on immune regulatory mechanisms and architecture/function at the maternal-fetal interface.
  • Determining the effect of infection and/or vaccination on the developing fetal immune system.
  • Profiling the repertoire of immune cells, proteins, and cytokines at the maternal-fetal interface across gestation to develop an atlas of the maternal-fetal immune landscape.
  • Defining placental mechanisms that enhance immunity and those that suppress and/or allow tolerance.
  • Determining immune contributions to key obstetrical diseases during pregnancy (preeclampsia, preterm birth, fetal growth restriction, pregnancy loss).
  • Identifying factors that mediate the selective transfer of viruses across the placenta.

Applicants may include development of key technologies/resources (tools, methods, and techniques) as a component of an original research project to address biological or immunological questions pertaining to the maternal-fetal interface. These may include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Novel methods and pipelines to efficiently integrate ‘omics’ data across the maternal-placental-fetal triad.
  • Engineered ex vivo systems (e.g., organoids, organs-on-chips) to define and examine the maternal-fetal interface.
  • Visualizing dynamic changes at the maternal-fetal interface.

Note that NIAID will consider applications that propose any of the following topics to be nonresponsive and not review them:

  • Clinical trials; however, using human specimens from independently funded completed or ongoing clinical trials is allowed.
  • Cancer studies, including those recruiting pregnant women undergoing cancer chemotherapy.
  • Behavioral research or epidemiological studies.
  • Studies in fetuses with known genetic abnormalities, including developmental defects.
  • Studies in infants undergoing transplantation procedures.
  • Studies in infants with autoimmune diseases or receiving immunosuppressive therapy.
  • Research on HIV/AIDS.

Annual Programmatic Meetings

To assist in the overall evaluation of the research program, all awardees will participate in a kickoff meeting and subsequent annual meetings to discuss individual program progress and foster collaborative research. All investigators are expected to attend these meetings with additional scientific staff from their research groups and present on current and planned projects and activities.

NIH strongly encourages applicants to include a diverse group of scientists in their research programs, including individuals from underrepresented backgrounds (see NOT-OD-20-031, Notice of NIH’s Interest in Diversity and NOT-OD-22-019, Reminder: Notice of NIH’s Encouragement of Applications Supporting Individuals from Underrepresented Ethnic and Racial Groups as well as Individuals with Disabilities).

Award Information

Application budgets should not exceed $400,000 in annual direct costs and should reflect the actual needs of the proposed project. The maximum project period is 5 years. Applications are due on October 11, 2023, by 5 p.m. local time of the applicant organization.

Direct any inquiries to Dr. Mercy PrabhuDas at mprabhudas@niaid.nih.gov or 240-627-3534.

For peer-review related inquiries, contact Dr. Hiten Chand at hiten.chand@nih.gov or 240-627-3245.

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Screening Newborns for Deadly Immune Disease Saves Lives

Introducing widespread screening of newborns for a deadly disease called severe combined immunodeficiency, or SCID, followed by early treatment boosted the five-year survival rate of children with the disorder from 73% before the advent of screening to 87% since, researchers report. Among children whose disease was suspected because of newborn screening rather than illness or family history, 92.5% survived five years or more after treatment.

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A Secret to Health and Long Life? Immune Resilience, NIAID Grantees Report

NIAID Now |

Do you know some people who almost never get sick and bounce back quickly when they do, while other people frequently suffer from one illness or another? NIAID-supported researchers have pinpointed an attribute of the immune system called immune resilience that helps explain why some people live longer and healthier lives than others.

Immune resilience involves the ability at any age to control inflammation and to preserve or rapidly restore immune activity that promotes resistance to disease, the investigators explain. They discovered that people with the highest level of immune resilience lived longer than others. People with greater immune resilience also were more likely to survive COVID-19 and sepsis as well as to have a lower risk of acquiring HIV infection and developing AIDS, symptomatic influenza, and recurrent skin cancer. In addition, women were more likely to have optimal immune resilience than men. These findings suggest that knowing an individual’s level of immune resilience could help healthcare providers assess the risk for a severe outcome in people with immunity-dependent diseases and identify mechanisms to extend lifespan, according to the investigators. The NIAID co-funded research was published today in the journal Nature Communications.

The nine-year study was led by Sunil Ahuja, M.D., the President's Council/Dielmann Chair for Excellence in Medical Research and professor of medicine at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio. Dr. Ahuja is also director of research enhancement programs at the university and director of the Veterans Administration Center for Personalized Medicine in the South Texas Veterans Health Care System in San Antonio.

Measuring Immune Resilience

Dr. Ahuja and colleagues developed two ways to measure immune resilience, or IR, one based on immune-cell levels in blood and the other on patterns of genes that are turned on, or expressed. The investigators evaluated these metrics in roughly 48,500 people ages 9 to 103 years who were exposed to pathogens and other immune-system stressors of varied types and severity levels, including the natural aging process. The data on these people, who were Black, Hispanic, or White, came from more than 18 different studies conducted in Africa, Europe and North America.

One of the two IR metrics—the immune health grade, or IHG—is based on the relative quantities of two types of white blood cells, CD8+ T cells and CD4+ T cells, which coordinate the immune system’s response to pathogens and kill other cells that have been infected. CD4+ T-cell counts in the blood have long been used to measure immune health, particularly in people with HIV. The IHG is innovative because it reflects the balance between CD8+ and CD4+ T-cell counts. The CD8+ to CD4+ T-cell balance in optimal IR is called IHG-I, while less optimal levels of IR are called IHG-II, IHG-III and IHG-IV.

The second IR metric is based on two patterns of gene expression: one that best predicted survival and another that best predicted death in two large groups of people after controlling for age and sex. The researchers labeled the survival-associated pattern SAS-1 and the mortality-associated pattern MAS-1. SAS-1 genes are largely related to immune competence—the ability to preserve or rapidly restore immune activity that promotes resistance to disease. MAS-1 genes are largely related to inflammation—the process by which the immune system recognizes and helps kill or remove pathogens and other harmful or foreign substances and begins the healing process. The scientists found that high levels of SAS-1 gene expression and low levels of MAS-1 gene expression indicated that a person had optimal IR and a lower risk of dying prematurely, while the opposite indicated poor IR and a higher risk of premature death. If SAS-1 and MAS-1 levels were both high or both low, IR and risk of premature death were moderate.

The investigators tested these two sets of metrics—IHGs and SAS-1/MAS-1—in the context of low-, moderate- and high-intensity stress to the immune system to determine how well the measures predicted health outcomes and lifespan after controlling for age and sex. The scientists identified groups of people experiencing these different intensities of immune challenges in the context of their daily lives. The group experiencing low-intensity immune stimulation comprised thousands of HIV-negative people ages 18 to 103 years participating in long-term studies of aging. The group experiencing moderate-intensity immune stimulation involved hundreds of HIV-negative people with SARS-CoV-2 infection, autoimmune disease, kidney transplant, or behavioral risk factors for acquiring HIV. Finally, the group experiencing high-intensity immune stimulation comprised thousands of people whose immune systems were responding to HIV replication in the blood soon after infection.

Variations in Immune Resilience

The researchers found that preserving optimal IR, as indicated by having either IHG-I or the combination of high SAS-1 and low MAS-1, was associated with the best health outcomes and longest lifespans. In addition, the risk or severity of negative immunity-dependent health outcomes increased as baseline IR level decreased. The scientists also demonstrated that the proportion of people with optimal IR (IHG-I or high SAS-1/low MAS-1) tended to be highest in the youngest people and lowest in the oldest people. Similarly, the proportion of people with the least optimal IR metrics (IHG-III or IHG-IV and low SAS-1/high MAS-1) tended to be lowest in the youngest age groups and highest in the oldest age groups. However, the investigators found that each of the four immune health grades and related SAS-1/MAS-1 gene expression profiles appeared in people in every age group.

As people age, the researchers explained, increasingly more health conditions such as acute infections, chronic diseases and cancers challenge their immune systems to respond and—ideally—recover. Over time, these challenges degrade most people’s immune health, accounting for the declining proportion of people with IHG-I and high SAS-1/low MAS-1 over the lifespan. However, some people who are 90 years old or more still have IHG-I and high SAS-1/low MAS-1—a reflection of their immune systems’ exceptional capacity to control inflammation and preserve or rapidly restore immune activity associated with longevity despite the many immune health challenges they have faced.

By contrast, the researchers demonstrate that some young adults who are repeatedly exposed to immune threats may have the least optimal IR, as measured by IHG-III or IHG-IV and low SAS-1/high MAS-1. The investigators show how young female sex workers who had many clients and did not use condoms—and thus were repeatedly exposed to sexually transmitted pathogens—had drastically degraded immune health even if they did not acquire HIV. In addition, sex workers with nonoptimal IR, especially those with IHG-IV, had a higher risk of acquiring HIV infection regardless of their level of risk behavior. However, most of the sex workers who began reducing their exposure to sexually transmitted pathogens by using condoms and decreasing their number of sex partners improved to IHG-I over the next 10 years.

The scientists also observed this plasticity of IR in other contexts. For example, the researchers found that most people couldn’t maintain optimal IR when they experienced inflammatory stress from a common symptomatic viral infection like a cold or the flu. In this situation, most people who the investigators studied developed low SAS-1/high MAS-1 within 48 hours of symptom onset, indicating poor IR and a high risk of dying prematurely. As people recovered from their infection, however, many gradually returned to the more favorable SAS-1/MAS-1 levels that they had before. Yet nearly 30 percent of those who had high SAS-1/low MAS-1 before getting sick did not fully regain that survival-associated profile by the end of the cold and flu season, even though they had recovered from their illness.

Interestingly, the investigators also found that the ability to maintain or develop optimal IR during a respiratory virus infection, as measured by high SAS-1/low MAS-1, correlated with an absence of symptoms.

Implications of Immune Resilience

The researchers suggest numerous implications of their findings for personalized medicine, biomedical research, and public health. First, some younger adults have low IR due to unsuspected immunosuppression, whereas some older adults have superior IR. These differences may account for why some younger people are predisposed to disease and shorter lifespans while some elderly people remain unusually healthy and live longer than their peers. Second, reducing exposure to immune stressors may maintain optimal IR or give people with low or moderate IR the opportunity to regain optimal IR, thereby decreasing risk of severe disease. Third, measuring people’s IHG and SAS-1/MAS-1 profile in the early stages of illness could allow for detection of poor IR and initiation of more aggressive therapy. Fourth, it may make sense to balance the intervention and placebo arms of clinical trials by both IR status and common factors such as age and sex when testing interventions dependent on controlling inflammation and preserving or rapidly restoring immune activity associated with longevity. Fifth, developing and implementing strategies to mitigate IR degradation may improve people’s response to vaccination as well as their overall health and lifespan. Finally, strategies for boosting IR and reducing recurrent immune stressors may help address racial, ethnic, and geographic disparities in diseases such as cancer and viral infections like COVID-19.

Reference: SK Ahuja, et al. Immune resilience despite inflammatory stress promotes longevity and favorable health outcomes including resistance to infection. Nature Communications DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-38238-6 (2023).

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