Vaccination with S pan , an antigen guided by SARS-CoV-2 S protein evolution, protects against challenge with viral variants in mice.
Yongliang ZhaoWenjia NiSimeng LiangLianghui DongMin XiangZeng CaiDanping NiuQiuhan ZhangDehe WangYucheng ZhengZhen ZhangDan ZhouWenhua GuoYongbing PanXiaoli WuYimin YangZhaofei JingYongzhong JiangYu ChenHuan YanYu ZhouKe XuKe LanPublished in: Science translational medicine (2023)
SARS-CoV-2 continues to accumulate mutations to evade immunity, leading to breakthrough infections after vaccination. How researchers can anticipate the evolutionary trajectory of the virus in advance in the design of next-generation vaccines requires investigation. Here, we performed a comprehensive study of 11,650,487 SARS-CoV-2 sequences, which revealed that the SARS-CoV-2 spike (S) protein evolved not randomly but into directional paths of either high infectivity plus low immune resistance or low infectivity plus high immune resistance. The viral infectivity and immune resistance of variants are generally incompatible, except for limited variants such as Beta and Kappa. The Omicron variant has the highest immune resistance but showed high infectivity in only one of the tested cell lines. To provide cross-clade immunity against variants that undergo diverse evolutionary pathways, we designed a new pan-vaccine antigen (S pan ). S pan was designed by analyzing the homology of 2675 SARS-CoV-2 S protein sequences from the NCBI database before the Delta variant emerged. The refined S pan protein harbors high-frequency residues at given positions that reflect cross-clade generality in sequence evolution. Compared with a prototype wild-type (S wt ) vaccine, which, when administered to mice, induced serum with decreased neutralization activity against emerging variants, S pan vaccination of mice elicited broad immunity to a wide range of variants, including those that emerged after our design. Moreover, vaccinating mice with a heterologous S pan booster conferred complete protection against lethal infection with the Omicron variant. Our results highlight the importance and feasibility of a universal vaccine to fight against SARS-CoV-2 antigenic drift.
Keyphrases
- sars cov
- copy number
- wild type
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- high frequency
- high fat diet induced
- genome wide
- protein protein
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- binding protein
- type diabetes
- small molecule
- insulin resistance
- dna methylation
- nuclear factor
- drug induced
- emergency department
- endothelial cells
- inflammatory response
- oxidative stress
- gene expression