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Syrian hamster convalescence from prototype SARS-CoV-2 confers measurable protection against the attenuated disease caused by the Omicron variant

Authors :
Kathryn A. Ryan
Kevin R. Bewley
Robert J. Watson
Christopher Burton
Oliver Carnell
Breeze E. Cavell
Amy Challis
Naomi S. Coombes
Elizabeth R. Davies
Jack Edun-Huges
Kirsty Emery
Rachel Fell
Susan A. Fotheringham
Karen E. Gooch
Kathryn Gowan
Alastair Handley
Debbie J. Harris
Richard Hesp
Laura Hunter
Richard Humphreys
Rachel Johnson
Chelsea Kennard
Daniel Knott
Sian Lister
Daniel Morley
Didier Ngabo
Karen L. Osman
Jemma Paterson
Elizabeth J. Penn
Steven T. Pullan
Kevin S. Richards
Sian Summers
Stephen R. Thomas
Thomas Weldon
Nathan R. Wiblin
Emma L. Rayner
Richard T. Vipond
Bassam Hallis
Francisco J. Salguero
Simon G. P. Funnell
Yper Hall
Source :
PLOS Pathogens. 19:e1011293
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2023.

Abstract

The mutation profile of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron (lineage BA.1) variant posed a concern for naturally acquired and vaccine-induced immunity. We investigated the ability of prior infection with an early SARS-CoV-2 ancestral isolate (Australia/VIC01/2020, VIC01) to protect against disease caused by BA.1. We established that BA.1 infection in naïve Syrian hamsters resulted in a less severe disease than a comparable dose of the ancestral virus, with fewer clinical signs including less weight loss. We present data to show that these clinical observations were almost absent in convalescent hamsters challenged with the same dose of BA.1 50 days after an initial infection with ancestral virus. These data provide evidence that convalescent immunity against ancestral SARS-CoV-2 is protective against BA.1 in the Syrian hamster model of infection. Comparison with published pre-clinical and clinical data supports consistency of the model and its predictive value for the outcome in humans. Further, the ability to detect protection against the less severe disease caused by BA.1 demonstrates continued value of the Syrian hamster model for evaluation of BA.1-specific countermeasures.

Details

ISSN :
15537374
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLOS Pathogens
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........c6871889ed3a270c8a3df2ae7626978d