World Vaccine Congress US 2026
Moving Beyond Binding: Why Antibody Function Matters for Vaccine Efficacy

At World Vaccine Congress US, Ashley Brate, PhD (Associate Director, Immunology at SeromYx Systems), presented how shifting beyond traditional antibody measurements can provide a more complete understanding of vaccine-induced immunity.
While antibody binding and neutralization titers are widely used to assess vaccine responses, they do not fully capture protection. The presentation highlighted that individuals with similar antibody levels can experience very different outcomes, underscoring that the functional quality of the immune response is a key driver of efficacy.
Central to this is the role of Fc-mediated effector functions, which enable antibodies to engage immune cells and trigger mechanisms such as phagocytosis, cytotoxicity, and complement activation. These functions are highly diverse and involve multiple immune cell types, yet they are often under-characterized in vaccine development despite their importance in both efficacy and safety.
The session also emphasized that neutralization alone does not fully explain protection, particularly in early immune responses or against emerging variants. In some cases, protection is observed before neutralizing antibodies are detectable, pointing to additional immune mechanisms at play.
Overall, the presentation reinforced a key takeaway: antibodies must do more than bind, they must function. Incorporating comprehensive, antigen-specific functional profiling approaches, such as
Systems Serology, is essential for identifying correlates of protection and advancing next-generation vaccine design.












