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A yeast expressed RBD-based SARS-CoV-2 vaccine formulated with 3M-052-alum adjuvant promotes protective efficacy in non-human primates

Authors :
Guido Ferrari
Neeta Shenvi
Thomas H. Vanderford
Susan Pereira Ribeiro
Wen-Hsiang Chen
David C. Montefiori
Talha Abid
Alessandro Sette
Daniela Weiskopf
Debashis Dutta
Katharine Floyd
Shelly Wang
Dieter Mielke
Sudhir Pai Kasturi
Georgia D. Tomaras
Pamela A. Kozlowski
Celia C. LaBranche
Maria Pino
Jungsoon Lee
Sherrie Jean
Venkata Viswanadh Edara
Xiaoying Shen
Justin Pollara
Justin C Smith
Mirko Paiardini
Rafick Pierre Sekaly
Fawn Connor-Stroud
Joyce Cohen
Gabriela Pacheco-Sanchez
Hongmei Gao
Zhuyun Liu
Christopher B. Fox
Sanjeev Gumber
Junfei Wei
Nathan Eisel
Maria Elena Bottazzi
Rachelle L. Stammen
Jennifer S. Wood
Shannon Kirejczyk
Bin Zhan
Muhammad Bilal Latif
Peter J. Hotez
Kirk Easley
Ulrich Strych
Jeroen Pollet
Mehul S. Suthar
Mark A. Tomai
Source :
Science immunology. 6(61)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Ongoing SARS-CoV-2 vaccine development is focused on identifying stable, cost-effective, and accessible candidates for global use, specifically in low and middle-income countries. Here, we report the efficacy of a rapidly scalable, novel yeast expressed SARS-CoV-2 specific receptor-binding domain (RBD) based vaccine in rhesus macaques. We formulated the RBD immunogen in alum, a licensed and an emerging alum adsorbed TLR-7/8 targeted, 3M-052-alum adjuvants. The RBD+3M-052-alum adjuvanted vaccine promoted better RBD binding and effector antibodies, higher CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies, improved Th1 biased CD4+T cell reactions, and increased CD8+ T cell responses when compared to the alum-alone adjuvanted vaccine. RBD+3M-052-alum induced a significant reduction of SARS-CoV-2 virus in respiratory tract upon challenge, accompanied by reduced lung inflammation when compared with unvaccinated controls. Anti-RBD antibody responses in vaccinated animals inversely correlated with viral load in nasal secretions and BAL. RBD+3M-052-alum blocked a post SARS-CoV-2 challenge increase in CD14+CD16++ intermediate blood monocytes, and Fractalkine, MCP-1, and TRAIL in the plasma. Decreased plasma analytes and intermediate monocyte frequencies correlated with reduced nasal and BAL viral loads. Lastly, RBD-specific plasma cells accumulated in the draining lymph nodes and not in the bone marrow, contrary to previous findings. Together, these data show that a yeast expressed, RBD-based vaccine+3M-052-alum provides robust immune responses and protection against SARS-CoV-2, making it a strong and scalable vaccine candidate.

Details

ISSN :
24709468
Volume :
6
Issue :
61
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bda30568edb257ce26a9cc220f70f562