Emerging Microbes and Infections (Jan 2021)

Recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus AdC7 expressing dimeric tandem-repeat spike protein RBD protects mice against COVID-19

  • Kun Xu,
  • Yaling An,
  • Qunlong Li,
  • Weijin Huang,
  • Yuxuan Han,
  • Tianyi Zheng,
  • Fang Fang,
  • Hui Liu,
  • Chuanyu Liu,
  • Ping Gao,
  • Senyu Xu,
  • Xueyuan Liu,
  • Rong Zhang,
  • Xin Zhao,
  • William J. Liu,
  • Yuhai Bi,
  • Youchun Wang,
  • Dongming Zhou,
  • Qinghan Wang,
  • Wenli Hou,
  • Qianfeng Xia,
  • George F. Gao,
  • Lianpan Dai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2021.1959270
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 1574 – 1588

Abstract

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A safe and effective vaccine is urgently needed to control the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic. Four adenovirus-vectored vaccines expressing spike (S) protein have been approved for use. Here, we generated several recombinant chimpanzee adenovirus (AdC7) vaccines expressing S, receptor-binding domain (RBD), or tandem-repeat dimeric RBD (RBD-tr2). We found vaccination via either intramuscular or intranasal route was highly immunogenic in mice to elicit both humoral and cellular immune responses. AdC7-RBD-tr2 showed higher antibody responses compared to either AdC7-S or AdC7-RBD. Intranasal administration of AdC7-RBD-tr2 additionally induced mucosal immunity with neutralizing activity in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Either single-dose or two-dose mucosal administration of AdC7-RBD-tr2 protected mice against SARS-CoV-2 challenge, with undetectable subgenomic RNA in lung and relieved lung injury. AdC7-RBD-tr2-elicted sera preserved the neutralizing activity against the circulating variants, especially the Delta variant. These results support AdC7-RBD-tr2 as a promising COVID-19 vaccine candidate.

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