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Cross-Protection against MERS-CoV by Prime-Boost Vaccination Using Viral Spike DNA and Protein

Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causes severe respiratory illness and has a high mortality of ∼34%. However, since its discovery in 2012, an effective vaccine has not been developed for it. To develop a vaccine against multiple strains of MERS-CoV, we targeted spike glycoprot...

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Autores principales: Choi, Jung-ah, Goo, Junghyun, Yang, Eunji, Jung, Dae-Im, Lee, Sena, Rho, Semi, Jeong, Yuji, Park, Young-Shin, Park, Hayan, Moon, Young-hye, Park, Uni, Seo, Sang-Hwan, Lee, Hyeja, Lee, Jae Myun, Cho, Nam-Hyuk, Song, Manki, Kim, Jae-Ouk
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7925194/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32967955
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01176-20
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author Choi, Jung-ah
Goo, Junghyun
Yang, Eunji
Jung, Dae-Im
Lee, Sena
Rho, Semi
Jeong, Yuji
Park, Young-Shin
Park, Hayan
Moon, Young-hye
Park, Uni
Seo, Sang-Hwan
Lee, Hyeja
Lee, Jae Myun
Cho, Nam-Hyuk
Song, Manki
Kim, Jae-Ouk
author_facet Choi, Jung-ah
Goo, Junghyun
Yang, Eunji
Jung, Dae-Im
Lee, Sena
Rho, Semi
Jeong, Yuji
Park, Young-Shin
Park, Hayan
Moon, Young-hye
Park, Uni
Seo, Sang-Hwan
Lee, Hyeja
Lee, Jae Myun
Cho, Nam-Hyuk
Song, Manki
Kim, Jae-Ouk
author_sort Choi, Jung-ah
collection PubMed
description Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causes severe respiratory illness and has a high mortality of ∼34%. However, since its discovery in 2012, an effective vaccine has not been developed for it. To develop a vaccine against multiple strains of MERS-CoV, we targeted spike glycoprotein (S) using prime-boost vaccination with DNA and insect cell-expressed recombinant proteins for the receptor-binding domain (RBD), S1, S2, SΔTM, or SΔER. Our S subunits were generated using an S sequence derived from the MERS-CoV EMC/2012 strain. We examined humoral and cellular immune responses of various combinations with DNA plasmids and recombinant proteins in mice. Mouse sera immunized with SΔER DNA priming/SΔTM protein boosting showed cross-neutralization against 15 variants of S-pseudovirions and the wild-type KOR/KNIH/002 strain. In addition, these immunizations provided full protection against the KOR/KNIH/002 strain challenge in human DPP4 knock-in mice. These findings suggest that vaccination with the S subunits derived from one viral strain can provide cross-protection against variant MERS-CoV strains with mutations in S. DNA priming/protein boosting increased gamma interferon production, while protein-alone immunization did not. The RBD subunit alone was insufficient to induce neutralizing antibodies, suggesting the importance of structural conformation. In conclusion, heterologous DNA priming with protein boosting is an effective way to induce both neutralizing antibodies and cell-mediated immune responses for MERS-CoV vaccine development. This study suggests a strategy for selecting a suitable platform for developing vaccines against MERS-CoV or other emerging coronaviruses. IMPORTANCE Coronavirus is an RNA virus with a higher mutation rate than DNA viruses. Therefore, a mutation in S-protein, which mediates viral infection by binding to a human cellular receptor, is expected to cause difficulties in vaccine development. Given that DNA-protein vaccines promote stronger cell-mediated immune responses than protein-only vaccination, we immunized mice with various combinations of DNA priming and protein boosting using the S-subunit sequences of the MERS-CoV EMC/2012 strain. We demonstrated a cross-protective effect against wild-type KOR/KNIH/002, a strain with two mutations in the S amino acids, including one in its RBD. The vaccine also provided cross-neutralization against 15 different S-pseudotyped viruses. These suggested that a vaccine targeting one variant of S can provide cross-protection against multiple viral strains with mutations in S. The regimen of DNA priming/Protein boosting can be applied to the development of other coronavirus vaccines.
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spelling pubmed-79251942021-03-09 Cross-Protection against MERS-CoV by Prime-Boost Vaccination Using Viral Spike DNA and Protein Choi, Jung-ah Goo, Junghyun Yang, Eunji Jung, Dae-Im Lee, Sena Rho, Semi Jeong, Yuji Park, Young-Shin Park, Hayan Moon, Young-hye Park, Uni Seo, Sang-Hwan Lee, Hyeja Lee, Jae Myun Cho, Nam-Hyuk Song, Manki Kim, Jae-Ouk J Virol Vaccines and Antiviral Agents Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) causes severe respiratory illness and has a high mortality of ∼34%. However, since its discovery in 2012, an effective vaccine has not been developed for it. To develop a vaccine against multiple strains of MERS-CoV, we targeted spike glycoprotein (S) using prime-boost vaccination with DNA and insect cell-expressed recombinant proteins for the receptor-binding domain (RBD), S1, S2, SΔTM, or SΔER. Our S subunits were generated using an S sequence derived from the MERS-CoV EMC/2012 strain. We examined humoral and cellular immune responses of various combinations with DNA plasmids and recombinant proteins in mice. Mouse sera immunized with SΔER DNA priming/SΔTM protein boosting showed cross-neutralization against 15 variants of S-pseudovirions and the wild-type KOR/KNIH/002 strain. In addition, these immunizations provided full protection against the KOR/KNIH/002 strain challenge in human DPP4 knock-in mice. These findings suggest that vaccination with the S subunits derived from one viral strain can provide cross-protection against variant MERS-CoV strains with mutations in S. DNA priming/protein boosting increased gamma interferon production, while protein-alone immunization did not. The RBD subunit alone was insufficient to induce neutralizing antibodies, suggesting the importance of structural conformation. In conclusion, heterologous DNA priming with protein boosting is an effective way to induce both neutralizing antibodies and cell-mediated immune responses for MERS-CoV vaccine development. This study suggests a strategy for selecting a suitable platform for developing vaccines against MERS-CoV or other emerging coronaviruses. IMPORTANCE Coronavirus is an RNA virus with a higher mutation rate than DNA viruses. Therefore, a mutation in S-protein, which mediates viral infection by binding to a human cellular receptor, is expected to cause difficulties in vaccine development. Given that DNA-protein vaccines promote stronger cell-mediated immune responses than protein-only vaccination, we immunized mice with various combinations of DNA priming and protein boosting using the S-subunit sequences of the MERS-CoV EMC/2012 strain. We demonstrated a cross-protective effect against wild-type KOR/KNIH/002, a strain with two mutations in the S amino acids, including one in its RBD. The vaccine also provided cross-neutralization against 15 different S-pseudotyped viruses. These suggested that a vaccine targeting one variant of S can provide cross-protection against multiple viral strains with mutations in S. The regimen of DNA priming/Protein boosting can be applied to the development of other coronavirus vaccines. American Society for Microbiology 2020-11-23 /pmc/articles/PMC7925194/ /pubmed/32967955 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01176-20 Text en Copyright © 2020 Choi et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Vaccines and Antiviral Agents
Choi, Jung-ah
Goo, Junghyun
Yang, Eunji
Jung, Dae-Im
Lee, Sena
Rho, Semi
Jeong, Yuji
Park, Young-Shin
Park, Hayan
Moon, Young-hye
Park, Uni
Seo, Sang-Hwan
Lee, Hyeja
Lee, Jae Myun
Cho, Nam-Hyuk
Song, Manki
Kim, Jae-Ouk
Cross-Protection against MERS-CoV by Prime-Boost Vaccination Using Viral Spike DNA and Protein
title Cross-Protection against MERS-CoV by Prime-Boost Vaccination Using Viral Spike DNA and Protein
title_full Cross-Protection against MERS-CoV by Prime-Boost Vaccination Using Viral Spike DNA and Protein
title_fullStr Cross-Protection against MERS-CoV by Prime-Boost Vaccination Using Viral Spike DNA and Protein
title_full_unstemmed Cross-Protection against MERS-CoV by Prime-Boost Vaccination Using Viral Spike DNA and Protein
title_short Cross-Protection against MERS-CoV by Prime-Boost Vaccination Using Viral Spike DNA and Protein
title_sort cross-protection against mers-cov by prime-boost vaccination using viral spike dna and protein
topic Vaccines and Antiviral Agents
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7925194/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32967955
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JVI.01176-20
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