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A universal SARS-CoV DNA vaccine inducing highly cross-reactive neutralizing antibodies and T cells.

Sofia K AppelbergGustaf AhlénJingyi YanNegin NikouyanSofie WeberOlivia LarssonUrban HöglundSoo AlemanFriedemann WeberEmma PerlhamreJohanna AproEva-Karin GidlundOla TuvessonSimona SalatiMatteo CadossiHanna TegelSophia HoberLars FrelinAli MirazimiMatti Sällberg
Published in: EMBO molecular medicine (2022)
New variants in the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic are more contagious (Alpha/Delta), evade neutralizing antibodies (Beta), or both (Omicron). This poses a challenge in vaccine development according to WHO. We designed a more universal SARS-CoV-2 DNA vaccine containing receptor-binding domain loops from the huCoV-19/WH01, the Alpha, and the Beta variants, combined with the membrane and nucleoproteins. The vaccine induced spike antibodies crossreactive between huCoV-19/WH01, Beta, and Delta spike proteins that neutralized huCoV-19/WH01, Beta, Delta, and Omicron virus in vitro. The vaccine primed nucleoprotein-specific T cells, unlike spike-specific T cells, recognized Bat-CoV sequences. The vaccine protected mice carrying the human ACE2 receptor against lethal infection with the SARS-CoV-2 Beta variant. Interestingly, priming of cross-reactive nucleoprotein-specific T cells alone was 60% protective, verifying observations from humans that T cells protect against lethal disease. This SARS-CoV vaccine induces a uniquely broad and functional immunity that adds to currently used vaccines.
Keyphrases
  • sars cov
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • copy number
  • single molecule
  • angiotensin ii
  • metabolic syndrome
  • dengue virus
  • drug induced
  • binding protein
  • nucleic acid
  • angiotensin converting enzyme
  • high fat diet induced