Durability and expansion of neutralizing antibody breadth following Ad26.COV2.S vaccination of mice

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作者
Shant H. Mahrokhian
Lisa H. Tostanoski
Catherine Jacob-Dolan
Roland C. Zahn
Frank Wegmann
Katherine McMahan
Jingyou Yu
Makda S. Gebre
Esther A. Bondzie
Huahua Wan
Olivia Powers
Tianyi Ye
Julia Barrett
Hanneke Schuitemaker
Dan H. Barouch
机构
[1] Harvard Medical School,Center for Virology and Vaccine Research, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
[2] Tufts University School of Medicine,undefined
[3] Harvard Medical School,undefined
[4] Ragon Institute of MGH,undefined
[5] MIT,undefined
[6] and Harvard,undefined
[7] Janssen Vaccines & Prevention BV,undefined
[8] Massachusetts Consortium on Pathogen Readiness,undefined
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npj Vaccines | / 7卷
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摘要
Emerging SARS-CoV-2 variants with the potential to escape binding and neutralizing antibody responses pose a threat to vaccine efficacy. We recently reported expansion of broadly neutralizing activity of vaccine-elicited antibodies in humans 8 months following a single immunization with Ad26.COV2.S. Here, we assessed the 15-month durability of antibody responses and their neutralizing capacity to B.1.617.2 (delta) and B.1.351 (beta) variants following a single immunization of Ad26.COV2.S in mice. We report the persistence of binding and neutralizing antibody titers following immunization with a concomitant increase in neutralizing antibody breadth to delta and beta variants over time. Evaluation of bone marrow and spleen at 15 months postimmunization revealed that Ad26.COV2.S-immunized mice tissues contained spike-specific antibody-secreting cells. We conclude that immunization with Ad26.COV2.S elicits a robust immune response against SARS-CoV-2 spike, which expands over time to neutralize delta and beta variants more robustly, and seeds bone marrow and spleen with long-lived spike-specific antibody-secreting cells. These data extend previous findings in humans and support the use of a mouse model as a potential tool to further explore the dynamics of the humoral immune response following vaccination with Ad26.COV2.S.
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