October 2, 2015

Evaluation of candidate vaccine approaches for MERS-CoV


Nature Communications
 
6,
 
Article number:
 
7712
 
doi:10.1038/ncomms8712
Received
 
Accepted
 
Published
 


Abstract

The emergence of Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) as a cause of severe respiratory disease highlights the need for effective approaches to CoV vaccine development. Efforts focused solely on the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of the viral Spike (S) glycoprotein may not optimize neutralizing antibody (NAb) responses.
Here we show that immunogens based on full-length S DNA and S1 subunit protein elicit robust serum-neutralizing activity against several MERS-CoV strains in mice and non-human primates. Serological analysis and isolation of murine monoclonal antibodies revealed that immunization elicits NAbs to RBD and, non-RBD portions of S1 and S2 subunit. Multiple neutralization mechanisms were demonstrated by solving the atomic structure of a NAb-RBD complex, through sequencing of neutralization escape viruses and by constructing MERS-CoV S variants for serological assays. Immunization of rhesus macaques confers protection against MERS-CoV-induced radiographic pneumonia, as assessed using computerized tomography, supporting this strategy as a promising approach for MERS-CoV vaccine development.

At a glance

Figures

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  1. MERS-CoV Spike glycoprotein vaccine design and immunogenicity in mice.
    Figure 1
  2. Varied vaccination regimens elicit neutralizing antibodies that target different regions of the MERS-CoV Spike glycoprotein.
    Figure 2
  3. Isolated mAbs exhibit high binding affinity against multiple Spike glycoprotein (Spike) domains.
    Figure 3
  4. MERS-CoV-neutralizing mAbs target multiple regions of the RBD.
    Figure 4
  5. MERS-CoV Spike immunogens elicit potent, long-lived neutralization in NHPs and protect from severe lung infiltrates.
    Figure 5
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