Emerging Microbes and Infections (Jan 2020)

SARS-CoV-2 spike produced in insect cells elicits high neutralization titres in non-human primates

  • Tingting Li,
  • Qingbing Zheng,
  • Hai Yu,
  • Dinghui Wu,
  • Wenhui Xue,
  • Hualong Xiong,
  • Xiaofen Huang,
  • Meifeng Nie,
  • Mingxi Yue,
  • Rui Rong,
  • Sibo Zhang,
  • Yuyun Zhang,
  • Yangtao Wu,
  • Shaojuan Wang,
  • Zhenghui Zha,
  • Tingting Chen,
  • Tingting Deng,
  • Yingbin Wang,
  • Tianying Zhang,
  • Yixin Chen,
  • Quan Yuan,
  • Qinjian Zhao,
  • Jun Zhang,
  • Ying Gu,
  • Shaowei Li,
  • Ningshao Xia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/22221751.2020.1821583
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 2076 – 2090

Abstract

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ABSTRACTThe current coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic was the result of the rapid transmission of a highly pathogenic coronavirus, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), for which there is no efficacious vaccine or therapeutic. Toward the development of a vaccine, here we expressed and evaluated as potential candidates four versions of the spike (S) protein using an insect cell expression system: receptor binding domain (RBD), S1 subunit, the wild-type S ectodomain (S-WT), and the prefusion trimer-stabilized form (S-2P). We showed that RBD appears as a monomer in solution, whereas S1, S-WT, and S-2P associate as homotrimers with substantial glycosylation. Cryo-electron microscopy analyses suggested that S-2P assumes an identical trimer conformation as the similarly engineered S protein expressed in 293 mammalian cells but with reduced glycosylation. Overall, the four proteins confer excellent antigenicity with convalescent COVID-19 patient sera in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), yet show distinct reactivities in immunoblotting. RBD, S-WT and S-2P, but not S1, induce high neutralization titres (>3-log) in mice after a three-round immunization regimen. The high immunogenicity of S-2P could be maintained at the lowest dose (1 μg) with the inclusion of an aluminium adjuvant. Higher doses (20 μg) of S-2P can elicit high neutralization titres in non-human primates that exceed 40-times the mean titres measured in convalescent COVID-19 subjects. Our results suggest that the prefusion trimer-stabilized SARS-CoV-2 S-protein from insect cells may offer a potential candidate strategy for the development of a recombinant COVID-19 vaccine.

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