Vaccines (Feb 2023)

Study of the Effects of Several SARS-CoV-2 Structural Proteins on Antiviral Immunity

  • Rong Yue,
  • Fengyuan Zeng,
  • Danjing Ma,
  • Ziyan Meng,
  • Xinghang Li,
  • Zhenxiao Zhang,
  • Haobo Zhang,
  • Qi Li,
  • Langxi Xu,
  • Zhenye Niu,
  • Dandan Li,
  • Yun Liao,
  • Guorun Jiang,
  • Li Yu,
  • Heng Zhao,
  • Ying Zhang,
  • Longding Liu,
  • Qihan Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines11030524
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 3
p. 524

Abstract

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The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Spike (S) protein is a critical viral antigenic protein that enables the production of neutralizing antibodies, while other structural proteins, including the membrane (M), nucleocapsid (N) and envelope (E) proteins, have unclear roles in antiviral immunity. In this study, S1, S2, M, N and E proteins were expressed in 16HBE cells to explore the characteristics of the resultant innate immune response. Furthermore, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from mice immunized with two doses of inactivated SARS-CoV-2 vaccine or two doses of mRNA vaccine were isolated and stimulated by these five proteins to evaluate the corresponding specific T-cell immune response. In addition, the levels of humoral immunity induced by two-dose inactivated vaccine priming followed by mRNA vaccine boosting, two homologous inactivated vaccine doses and two homologous mRNA vaccine doses in immunized mice were compared. Our results suggested that viral structural proteins can activate the innate immune response and elicit a specific T-cell response in mice immunized with the inactivated vaccine. However, the existence of the specific T-cell response against M, N and E is seemingly insufficient to improve the level of humoral immunity.

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