D
Diane Niño
Researcher at Baylor College of Medicine
Publications - 18
Citations - 1289
Diane Niño is an academic researcher from Baylor College of Medicine. The author has contributed to research in topics: Vaccination & Influenza A virus. The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 18 publications receiving 1167 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Antibody Correlates and Predictors of Immunity to Naturally Occurring Influenza in Humans and the Importance of Antibody to the Neuraminidase
Robert B. Couch,Robert L. Atmar,Luis M. Franco,John M. Quarles,Janet M. Wells,Nancy Arden,Diane Niño,John W. Belmont +7 more
TL;DR: Increasing anti-HA and NA antibody in serum and secretions correlated with reducing pH1N1 influenza virus infection and illness in healthy young adults.
Journal ArticleDOI
Early Patterns of Gene Expression Correlate With the Humoral Immune Response to Influenza Vaccination in Humans
Kristine L. Bucasas,Luis M. Franco,Chad A. Shaw,Molly S. Bray,Janet M. Wells,Diane Niño,Nancy Arden,John M. Quarles,Robert B. Couch,John W. Belmont +9 more
TL;DR: The results highlight the role of a systems biology approach in understanding the molecular events that take place in vivo after influenza vaccination and in the development of better predictors of vaccine responsiveness.
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Safety and immunogenicity of a high dosage trivalent influenza vaccine among elderly subjects
Robert B. Couch,Patricia L. Winokur,Rebecca C. Brady,Robert B. Belshe,Wilbur H. Chen,Thomas R. Cate,Bryndis Sigurdardottir,Amy Hoeper,Irene Graham,Robert R. Edelman,Fenhua He,Diane Niño,Jose Capellan,Frederick L. Ruben +13 more
TL;DR: The high dosage vaccine induced a higher frequency of serum antibody increases in both hemagglutination-inhibiting (HAI) and neutralization tests for all three vaccine viruses in the total group as well as subjects vaccinated and those not vaccinated the previous year.
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Integrative genomic analysis of the human immune response to influenza vaccination
Luis M. Franco,Kristine L. Bucasas,Janet M. Wells,Diane Niño,Xueqing Wang,Gladys Zapata,Nancy Arden,Alexander Renwick,Peng Yu,John M. Quarles,Molly S. Bray,Robert B. Couch,John W. Belmont,Chad A. Shaw +13 more
TL;DR: An integrative, longitudinal study combining genetic, transcriptional, and immunologic data in humans given seasonal influenza vaccine shows that variation at the level of genes involved in membrane trafficking and antigen processing significantly influences the human response to influenza vaccination.
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A Randomized Clinical Trial of an Inactivated Avian Influenza A (H7N7) Vaccine
TL;DR: This inactivated subunit influenza A (H7N7) vaccine was safe but poorly immunogenic in humans.