Vaccines (Apr 2024)

Major Role of S-Glycoprotein in Providing Immunogenicity and Protective Immunity in mRNA Lipid Nanoparticle Vaccines Based on SARS-CoV-2 Structural Proteins

  • Evgeniia N. Bykonia,
  • Denis A. Kleymenov,
  • Vladimir A. Gushchin,
  • Andrei E. Siniavin,
  • Elena P. Mazunina,
  • Sofia R. Kozlova,
  • Anastasia N. Zolotar,
  • Evgeny V. Usachev,
  • Nadezhda A. Kuznetsova,
  • Elena V. Shidlovskaya,
  • Andrei A. Pochtovyi,
  • Daria D. Kustova,
  • Igor A. Ivanov,
  • Sergey E. Dmitriev,
  • Roman A. Ivanov,
  • Denis Y. Logunov,
  • Alexander L. Gintsburg

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines12040379
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. 379

Abstract

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SARS-CoV-2 variants have evolved over time in recent years, demonstrating immune evasion of vaccine-induced neutralizing antibodies directed against the original S protein. Updated S-targeted vaccines provide a high level of protection against circulating variants of SARS-CoV-2, but this protection declines over time due to ongoing virus evolution. To achieve a broader protection, novel vaccine candidates involving additional antigens with low mutation rates are currently needed. Based on our recently studied mRNA lipid nanoparticle (mRNA-LNP) platform, we have generated mRNA-LNP encoding SARS-CoV-2 structural proteins M, N, S from different virus variants and studied their immunogenicity separately or in combination in vivo. As a result, all mRNA-LNP vaccine compositions encoding the S and N proteins induced excellent titers of RBD- and N-specific binding antibodies. The T cell responses were mainly specific CD4+ T cell lymphocytes producing IL-2 and TNF-alpha. mRNA-LNP encoding the M protein did not show a high immunogenicity. High neutralizing activity was detected in the sera of mice vaccinated with mRNA-LNP encoding S protein (alone or in combinations) against closely related strains, but was undetectable or significantly lower against an evolutionarily distant variant. Our data showed that the addition of mRNAs encoding S and M antigens to mRNA-N in the vaccine composition enhanced the immunogenicity of mRNA-N and induced a more robust immune response to the N protein. Based on our results, we suggested that the S protein plays a key role in enhancing the immune response to the N protein when they are both encoded in the mRNA-LNP vaccine.

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