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Computationally designed Spike antigens induce neutralising responses against the breadth of SARS-COV-2 variants.

Sneha VishwanathGeorge William CarnellMartina BillmeierLuis OhlendorfPatrick NeckermannBenedikt AsbachCharlotte L GeorgeMaria Suau SansAndrew ChanJoey OlivierAngalee NadesalingamSebastian EinhauserNigel J TempertonDiego CantoniJoe GroveIngo JordanVolker SandigPaul TonksJohannes GeigerChristian DohmenVerena MummertAnne Rosalind SamuelChristian PlankRebecca KinsleyRalf WagnerJonathan Luke Heeney
Published in: NPJ vaccines (2024)
Updates of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines are required to generate immunity in the population against constantly evolving SARS-CoV-2 variants of concerns (VOCs). Here we describe three novel in-silico designed spike-based antigens capable of inducing neutralising antibodies across a spectrum of SARS-CoV-2 VOCs. Three sets of antigens utilising pre-Delta (T2_32), and post-Gamma sequence data (T2_35 and T2_36) were designed. T2_32 elicited superior neutralising responses against VOCs compared to the Wuhan-1 spike antigen in DNA prime-boost immunisation regime in guinea pigs. Heterologous boosting with the attenuated poxvirus - Modified vaccinia Ankara expressing T2_32 induced broader neutralising immune responses in all primed animals. T2_32, T2_35 and T2_36 elicited broader neutralising capacity compared to the Omicron BA.1 spike antigen administered by mRNA immunisation in mice. These findings demonstrate the utility of structure-informed computationally derived modifications of spike-based antigens for inducing broad immune responses covering more than 2 years of evolved SARS-CoV-2 variants.
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