Scott Hensley
· ProfessorVerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1996–2026
About
Scott Hensley, PhD, is a Professor of Microbiology at the University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine. His research focuses on influenza viruses, including H5N1 and seasonal influenza, as well as SARS-CoV-2. He investigates mechanisms that promote antigenic drift in influenza viruses, assesses population immunity against new strains with pandemic potential, and studies how childhood influenza exposures influence immune responses to seasonal and pandemic strains. His work aims to understand viral evolution, immune response heterogeneity, and vaccine development to improve viral vaccines and therapeutics. Hensley's laboratory conducts experiments to better understand influenza virus immune evasion, monitor the spread of influenza with pandemic potential, and develop new vaccine platforms. His research also explores how SARS-CoV-2 evolves in populations with heterogeneous immunity. He has contributed to understanding antibody responses, viral pathogenesis, and vaccine efficacy, with a particular interest in antigenic drift, viral receptors, and antibody specificity. His work is characterized by applying basic immunological and virological approaches to address pressing issues in infectious disease control.
Research topics
- Immunology
- Medicine
- Biology
- Virology
- Computer Science
- Internal medicine
- Pathology
- Genetics
- Molecular biology
- Computational biology
Selected publications
2026-01-28
peer-reviewOpen accessHuman influenza viruses rapidly acquire mutations in their hemagglutinin (HA) protein that erode neutralization by antibodies from prior exposures. Here, we use a sequencing-based assay to measure neutralization titers for 78 recent H3N2 HA strains against a large set of children and adult sera, measuring ∼10,000 total titers. There is substantial person-to-person heterogeneity in the titers against different viral strains, both within and across age cohorts. The growth rates of H3N2 strains in the human population in 2023 are highly correlated with the fraction of sera with low titers against each strain. Notably, strain growth rates are less correlated with neutralization titers against pools of human sera, demonstrating the importance of population heterogeneity in shaping viral evolution. Overall, these results suggest that high-throughput neutralization measurements of human sera against many different viral strains can help explain the evolution of human influenza.
2026-01-28
peer-reviewOpen accessHuman influenza viruses rapidly acquire mutations in their hemagglutinin (HA) protein that erode neutralization by antibodies from prior exposures. Here, we use a sequencing-based assay to measure neutralization titers for 78 recent H3N2 HA strains against a large set of children and adult sera, measuring ∼10,000 total titers. There is substantial person-to-person heterogeneity in the titers against different viral strains, both within and across age cohorts. The growth rates of H3N2 strains in the human population in 2023 are highly correlated with the fraction of sera with low titers against each strain. Notably, strain growth rates are less correlated with neutralization titers against pools of human sera, demonstrating the importance of population heterogeneity in shaping viral evolution. Overall, these results suggest that high-throughput neutralization measurements of human sera against many different viral strains can help explain the evolution of human influenza.
2026-01-28
peer-reviewOpen accessHuman influenza viruses rapidly acquire mutations in their hemagglutinin (HA) protein that erode neutralization by antibodies from prior exposures. Here, we use a sequencing-based assay to measure neutralization titers for 78 recent H3N2 HA strains against a large set of children and adult sera, measuring ∼10,000 total titers. There is substantial person-to-person heterogeneity in the titers against different viral strains, both within and across age cohorts. The growth rates of H3N2 strains in the human population in 2023 are highly correlated with the fraction of sera with low titers against each strain. Notably, strain growth rates are less correlated with neutralization titers against pools of human sera, demonstrating the importance of population heterogeneity in shaping viral evolution. Overall, these results suggest that high-throughput neutralization measurements of human sera against many different viral strains can help explain the evolution of human influenza.
Paternal immune activation protects offspring from severe disease during viral infection 3329
The Journal of Immunology · 2025-11-01
articleOpen accessAbstract Description Maternal immune activation during gestation can influence offspring behavior and immunity. However, the influence of paternal immune activation (PIA) on progeny is understudied. Limited evidence indicates that PIA influences offspring behavior via alterations in epigenetic information carried within sperm. Yet, explorations into the impacts of PIA on offspring immunity are minimal. I have shown that PIA with or without viral replication remodels the epigenetic information within sperm by altering the small RNA profile. Moreover, we have demonstrated that PIA alters transcription in the early embryo, downregulating immune regulatory genes. To further explore the impacts of PIA, juvenile offspring from PIA or control males were infected with an adult lethal dose of Influenza A Virus. Offspring sired by PIA males had improved survival and less severe clinical outcomes during infection. Protection did not correlate with lower viral burden in the lungs, leading us to explore differences in immune mediated pathology. Altogether, inflammation in the father alters offspring immunity, providing protection during viral infection. We believe PIA mediated alterations to sperm small RNAs spark differential immune regulation as early as the preimplantation embryo, leading to protection from severe infection within offspring. This paradigm-altering finding uncovers a new mechanism in the evolutionary arms race between host and pathogen wherein immunity can be acquired within one generation. Funding Sources NSF GRFP The PEW Charitable Trust The David and Lucille Packard Foundation Topic Categories Immune Response Regulation: Molecular Mechanisms (IRM)
eLife · 2025-06-03 · 4 citations
preprintOpen accessAbstract Human influenza viruses rapidly acquire mutations in their hemagglutinin (HA) protein that erode neutralization by antibodies from prior exposures. Here, we use a sequencing-based assay to measure neutralization titers for 78 recent H3N2 HA strains against a large set of children and adult sera, measuring ∼10,000 total titers. There is substantial person-to-person heterogeneity in the titers against different viral strains, both within and across age cohorts. The growth rates of H3N2 strains in the human population in 2023 are highly correlated with the fraction of sera with low titers against each strain. Notably, strain growth rates are less correlated with neutralization titers against pools of human sera, demonstrating the importance of population heterogeneity in shaping viral evolution. Overall, these results suggest that high-throughput neutralization measurements of human sera against many different viral strains can help explain the evolution of human influenza.
Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses · 2025-06-01
articleOpen accessSenior authorCorrespondingBACKGROUND: Multiple clades of H1N1 influenza A viruses (IAVs) circulated during the 2019-2020 season. Here, we completed serological assays to determine the specificities of serum antibodies from humans infected with viruses from different H1N1 clades during the 2019-2020 season. METHODS: We collected nasopharyngeal (NP) swabs and serum from influenza-infected individuals who received care within the University of Pennsylvania Health System (UPHS). We sequenced H1N1 viruses from NP swabs and completed hemagglutination inhibition assays using serum and viruses from different H1N1 clades that we identified from NP swabs. We also collected serum samples from influenza B virus (IBV)-infected patients at UPHS, allowing us to examine antibody titers associated with H1N1 versus IBV infection. RESULTS: Sequence analyses revealed that most IAV-infected individuals were infected with clade 6B.1A.5a.1 and 6B.1A.5a.2 H1N1 viruses that possessed substitutions at major antigenic sites of hemagglutinin. We found that antibodies from both H1N1- and IBV-infected individuals recognized the 6B.1A.1 H1N1 vaccine component of the 2019-2020 vaccine more efficiently compared to the circulating 6B.1A.5a.1 and 6B.1A.5a.2 H1N1 viruses. Patients infected with 6B.1A.5a.2 clade H1N1 viruses had significantly higher titers against the vaccine strain virus, suggesting that the 6B.1A.5a.2 virus evaded antibodies elicited from previous vaccinations or infections. CONCLUSIONS: These studies suggest that most individuals, irrespective of whether they were infected with H1N1 virus or IBV during the 2019-2020 season, possessed antibodies that poorly reacted to circulating H1N1 strains.
2025-11-27
peer-reviewOpen accessHuman influenza viruses rapidly acquire mutations in their hemagglutinin (HA) protein that erode neutralization by antibodies from prior exposures. Here, we use a sequencing-based assay to measure neutralization titers for 78 recent H3N2 HA strains against a large set of children and adult sera, measuring ∼10,000 total titers. There is substantial person-to-person heterogeneity in the titers against different viral strains, both within and across age cohorts. The growth rates of H3N2 strains in the human population in 2023 are highly correlated with the fraction of sera with low titers against each strain. Notably, strain growth rates are less correlated with neutralization titers against pools of human sera, demonstrating the importance of population heterogeneity in shaping viral evolution. Overall, these results suggest that high-throughput neutralization measurements of human sera against many different viral strains can help explain the evolution of human influenza.
2025-03-15
peer-reviewSenior authorAn <i>Il12</i> mRNA-LNP adjuvant enhances mRNA vaccine–induced CD8 T cell responses
Science Immunology · 2025-06-06 · 32 citations
articleOpen accessOptimizing vaccine design to induce CD8 T cell responses has been challenging, but lipid nanoparticle (LNP)–encapsulated mRNA vaccines effectively generate CD8 T cell memory. Interleukin-12 (IL-12) supports CD8 T cell expansion and acquisition of effector function, but the role of IL-12 in the generation of CD8 T responses to mRNA vaccination is unclear. Here, we determine that endogenous IL-12 is not required for CD8 T cell responses to mRNA-LNP vaccination. We assessed the adjuvant activity of an mRNA-LNP encapsulating a codon-optimized mRNA that encodes both subunits of IL-12 (LNP–IL-12). Coadministration of LNP–IL-12 with ovalbumin (OVA) mRNA-LNPs enhanced CD8 T cell expansion and effector function and expanded circulating, effector, and tissue-resident memory CD8 T cells. LNP–IL-12 increased CD8 T cell responses against SARS-CoV-2 and influenza virus antigens and improved protection against Listeria monocytogenes –OVA and B16F0-OVA melanoma. Thus, modification of mRNA-LNP formulations to include a cytokine mRNA provides a strategy to enhance CD8 T cell–mediated protection.
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) · 2025-05-01 · 8 citations
preprintAbstract Highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) clade 2.3.4.4b H5N1 is circulating widely in lactating cows in the United States. Due to the critical need for intervention strategies for this outbreak, we evaluated antibody and cellular immune responses of a clade 2.3.4.4b H5 mRNA-LNP vaccine in calves. We found that the H5 mRNA-LNP vaccine induced a robust antibody and CD8 + T cellular-mediated immune response and conferred protection against clade 2.3.4.4b H5N1 infection.
Recent grants
Training in Emerging Infectious Diseases
NIH · $4.4M · 2003–2024
NIH · $2.5M · 2020
Impact of prior influenza exposures on antibody repertoires to new viral strains
NIH · $3.7M · 2014–2024
NIH · $270k · 2013
Project 2: Durable impact of HCV on innate and adaptive immunity
NIH · $75.5M · 2009–2029
Frequent coauthors
- 143 shared
E. John Wherry
University of Pennsylvania
- 111 shared
Sigrid Gouma
- 68 shared
Laura A. Vella
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- 65 shared
Allison R. Greenplate
Translational Therapeutics (United States)
- 65 shared
Divij Mathew
University of Pennsylvania
- 64 shared
Amy E. Baxter
California University of Pennsylvania
- 62 shared
Josephine R. Giles
University of Pennsylvania
- 59 shared
Madison E. Weirick
University of Minnesota
Labs
Hensley LaboratoryPI
Education
- 2000
B.A., Biology
University of Delaware
- 2006
Ph.D., Cell and Molecular Biology
University of Pennsylvania
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