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BNT162b vaccines protect rhesus macaques from SARS-CoV-2

Authors :
Bernadette Jesionek
Charles Tan
Christoph Kröner
Jennifer Obregon
Stephanie Hein
Kathleen M. Brasky
Andreas Kuhn
Leyla Fischer
Guy Singh
Diana Schneider
Kathrin U. Jansen
Jane Fontenot
Seungil Han
Michal Gazi
Corinna Rosenbaum
Ingrid L. Scully
Pei Yong Shi
Parag Sahasrabudhe
Stefanie A. Krumm
Hanna Junginger
Camila R. Fontes-Garfias
Julia Schlereth
Bonny Gaby Lui
Mathias Vormehr
Andre P. Heinen
Alptekin Güler
Stephanie Fesser
Sarah C. Dany
Ellene H. Mashalidis
Danka Pavliakova
Shambhunath Choudhary
Mohan S. Maddur
Petra Adams-Quack
Yvonne Feuchter
Matthew C. Griffor
Ferdia Bates
Ramón de la Caridad Güimil Garcia
Tara Ciolino
Özlem Türeci
Stefan Schille
Kena A. Swanson
Kerstin C. Walzer
Alexander Muik
Jakob Loschko
Ayuko Ota-Setlik
Nicole L. Nedoma
Lena M. Kranz
Tompkins Kristin Rachael
Thorsten Klamp
Ugur Sahin
Ann Kathrin Wallisch
Warren Kalina
Olga Gonzalez
Fulvia Vascotto
Philip R. Dormitzer
Ye Che
Kendra J. Alfson
Ricardo Carrion
Thomas Ziegenhals
Shannan Hall-Ursone
Rani S. Sellers
Thomas Hiller
Isis Kanevsky
Matthew R. Gutman
Michael W. Pride
Stephanie Erbar
Bianca Sänger
Deepak Kaushal
Journey Cole
David Eisel
Andreas A.H. Su
Joshua A. Lees
Annette B. Vogel
Arianne Plaschke
Source :
Nature
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

A safe and effective vaccine against COVID-19 is urgently needed in quantities that are sufficient to immunize large populations. Here we report the preclinical development of two vaccine candidates (BNT162b1 and BNT162b2) that contain nucleoside-modified messenger RNA that encodes immunogens derived from the spike glycoprotein (S) of SARS-CoV-2, formulated in lipid nanoparticles. BNT162b1 encodes a soluble, secreted trimerized receptor-binding domain (known as the RBD–foldon). BNT162b2 encodes the full-length transmembrane S glycoprotein, locked in its prefusion conformation by the substitution of two residues with proline (S(K986P/V987P); hereafter, S(P2) (also known as P2 S)). The flexibly tethered RBDs of the RBD–foldon bind to human ACE2 with high avidity. Approximately 20% of the S(P2) trimers are in the two-RBD ‘down’, one-RBD ‘up’ state. In mice, one intramuscular dose of either candidate vaccine elicits a dose-dependent antibody response with high virus-entry inhibition titres and strong T-helper-1 CD4+ and IFNγ+CD8+ T cell responses. Prime–boost vaccination of rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta) with the BNT162b candidates elicits SARS-CoV-2-neutralizing geometric mean titres that are 8.2–18.2× that of a panel of SARS-CoV-2-convalescent human sera. The vaccine candidates protect macaques against challenge with SARS-CoV-2; in particular, BNT162b2 protects the lower respiratory tract against the presence of viral RNA and shows no evidence of disease enhancement. Both candidates are being evaluated in phase I trials in Germany and the USA1–3, and BNT162b2 is being evaluated in an ongoing global phase II/III trial (NCT04380701 and NCT04368728). BNT162b1 and BNT162b2 are two candidate mRNA vaccines against COVID-19 that elicit high virus-entry inhibition titres in mice, elicit high virus-neutralizing titres in rhesus macaques and protect macaques from SARS-CoV-2 challenge.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
592
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3903ab0fb32c26fb7ed5bc8fa70296ed
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-021-03275-y