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Characterization of the SARS-CoV-2 B.1.621 (Mu) variant.

Peter J HalfmannMakoto KurodaTammy ArmbrustJames TheilerAriane BalaramGage Kahl MorenoMolly A AccolaKiyoko Iwatsuki-HorimotoRiccardo ValdezEmily StonemanKatarina M BraunSeiya YamayoshiElizabeth D SomsenJohn James BaczenasKeiko MitamuraMasao HagiharaEisuke AdachiMichiko KogaMatthew McLaughlinWilliam M RehrauerMasaki ImaiShinya YamamotoTakeya TsutsumiMakoto SaitoThomas C FriedrichShelby L O ConnorDavid H O'ConnorAubree GordonBette T KorberYoshihiro Kawaoka
Published in: Science translational medicine (2022)
The SARS-CoV-2 B.1.621 (Mu) variant emerged in January 2021 and was categorized as a variant of interest by the World Health Organization in August 2021. This designation prompted us to study the sensitivity of this variant to antibody neutralization. In a live virus neutralization assay with serum samples from individuals vaccinated with the Pfizer/BioNTech or Moderna mRNA vaccines, we measured neutralization antibody titers against B.1.621, an early isolate (spike 614D), and a variant of concern (B.1.351, Beta variant). We observed reduced neutralizing antibody titers against the B.1.621 variant (3.4- to 7-fold reduction, depending on the serum sample and time after the second vaccination) compared to the early isolate and a similar reduction when compared to B.1.351. Likewise, convalescent serum from hamsters previously infected with an early isolate neutralized B.1.621 to a lower degree. Despite this antibody titer reduction, hamsters could not be efficiently rechallenged with the B.1.621 variant, suggesting that the immune response to the first infection is adequate to provide protection against a subsequent infection with the B.1.621 variant.
Keyphrases
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  • high throughput
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