Microorganisms (Feb 2024)

A Pseudovirus-Based Neutralization Assay for SARS-CoV-2 Variants: A Rapid, Cost-Effective, BSL-2–Based High-Throughput Assay Useful for Vaccine Immunogenicity Evaluation

  • Zhaohui Cai,
  • Raj Kalkeri,
  • Mingzhu Zhu,
  • Shane Cloney-Clark,
  • Benjamin Haner,
  • Mi Wang,
  • Bahar Osman,
  • Dominic Dent,
  • Sheau-Line Feng,
  • Zach Longacre,
  • Greg Glenn,
  • Joyce S. Plested

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12030501
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 501

Abstract

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Neutralizing antibody responses from COVID-19 vaccines are pivotal in conferring protection against severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Effective COVID-19 vaccines and assays measuring neutralizing antibodies against emerging variants (i.e., XBB.1.5, XBB.1.16, and XBB.2.3) are needed. The use of biosafety level (BSL)-3 laboratories for live virus assays results in higher costs and a longer turnaround time; therefore, a BSL-2–based pseudovirus neutralization assay (PNT) was developed. The pseudoviruses were produced by cotransfecting cells with plasmids encoding a lentiviral backbone-expressing luciferase reporter; non-surface proteins for lentiviral production; and ancestral or Omicron (BA.1 and BA.5) SARS-CoV-2 spike (S) proteins. The PNT was developed and optimized in dose and kinetics experiments. The representative serum samples (COVID-19–convalescent or NVX-CoV2373–vaccinated participants enrolled in the 2019nCoV-101 trial) demonstrated a wide dynamic range. The neutralization data showed robust correlation with validated anti-recombinant spike IgG levels and angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 inhibition titers (ancestral). This assay is suitable for measurement of the neutralization ability in clinical samples from individuals infected with SARS-CoV-2 or immunized with a COVID-19 vaccine. The results suggest that this PNT provides a lower cost, high-throughput, rapid turnaround alternative to BSL-3–based microneutralization assays and enables the discovery and development of effective vaccines against emerging variants.

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