Emerging Microbes and Infections (Dec 2022)

Preclinical immunological evaluation of an intradermal heterologous vaccine against SARS-CoV-2 variants

  • Shengtao Fan,
  • Kang Xiao,
  • Dandan Li,
  • Heng Zhao,
  • Jingjing Zhang,
  • Li Yu,
  • Penglan Chang,
  • Shuangli Zhu,
  • Xingli Xu,
  • Yun Liao,
  • Tianjiao Ji,
  • Guorun Jiang,
  • Dongmei Yan,
  • Fengyuan Zeng,
  • Suqin Duan,
  • Baicheng Xia,
  • Lichun Wang,
  • Fengmei Yang,
  • Zhanlong He,
  • Yang Song,
  • Pingfang Cui,
  • Xiaolei Li,
  • Yaxing Zhang,
  • Bangyi Zheng,
  • Ying Zhang,
  • Wenbo Xu,
  • Qihan Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2021.2021807
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 212 – 226

Abstract

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The recent emergence of COVID-19 variants has necessitated the development of new vaccines that stimulate the formation of high levels of neutralizing antibodies against S antigen variants. A new strategy involves the intradermal administration of heterologous vaccines composed of one or two doses of inactivated vaccine and a booster dose with the mutated S1 protein (K-S). Such vaccines improve the immune efficacy by increasing the neutralizing antibody titers and promoting specific T cell responses against five variants of the RBD protein. A viral challenge test with the B.1.617.2 (Delta) variant confirmed that both administration schedules (i.e. “1 + 1” and “2 + 1”) ensured protection against this strain. These results suggest that the aforementioned strategy is effective for protecting against new variants and enhances the anamnestic immune response in the immunized population.

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