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Immunizations with diverse sarbecovirus receptor binding domains elicit SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies against a conserved site of vulnerability

Authors :
Hans-Martin Jäck
Bernadette M. Saunders
Harikrishnan Balachandran
Peter R. Schofield
William D. Rawlinson
Hui Li
Matthew A. Spence
Rowena A. Bull
Nicole G. Hansbro
Katherine J. L. Jackson
Jake Y. Henry
Robert Brink
Philip M. Hansbro
Anupria Aggrawal
Simon Schäfer
Deborah L. Burnett
Christopher C. Goodnow
Rudolfo Karl
David B. Langley
Daniel Christ
Alastair G. Stewart
Warwick J. Britton
Colin J. Jackson
Gregory J. Walker
Jennifer Jackson
Edith Roth
Thomas Winkler
Mandeep Singh
Helen Lenthall
Sean Emery
Claire Milthorpe
Alberto Ospina Stella
Franka Witthauer
Anthony D. Kelleher
Marianne Martinello
Matt D. Johansen
Romain Rouet
Stuart Turville
Sebastian R. Schulz
Source :
Immunity
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc., 2021.

Abstract

Viral mutations are an emerging concern in reducing SARS-CoV-2 vaccination efficacy. Second generation vaccines will need to elicit neutralizing antibodies against sites that are evolutionarily conserved across the sarbecovirus subgenus. Here, we immunized mice containing a human antibody repertoire with diverse sarbecovirus receptor binding domains (RBDs) to identify antibodies targeting conserved sites of vulnerability. Antibodies with broad reactivity against diverse clade B RBDs targeting the conserved class 4 epitope, with recurring IGHV/IGKV pairs, were readily elicited but were non-neutralizing. However, rare class 4 antibodies binding this conserved RBD supersite showed potent neutralization of SARS-CoV-2 and all variants of concern. Structural analysis revealed that neutralizing ability of cross-reactive antibodies was reserved only for those with an elongated CDRH3 that extends the antiparallel beta-sheet RBD core and orients the antibody light chain to obstruct ACE2-RBD interactions. These results identify a structurally defined pathway for vaccine strategies eliciting escape-resistant SARS-CoV-2 neutralizing antibodies.<br />Graphical Abstract<br />Viral mutations are an emerging concern in reducing SARS-CoV-2 vaccination efficacy. Burnett et al. immunized humanized mice with different diverse sarbecovirus RBDs to elicit antibodies targeting conserved sites. Non-neutralizing cross-reactive antibodies targeting the conserved class 4 epitope were readily elicited. Neutralizing ability was reserved only for antibodies binding this conserved supersite through an elongated CDRH3 that obstructed ACE2-RBD interactions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10974180 and 10747613
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Immunity
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ee132e31ffcfac77af7136a8fdc94d3f