iScience (Jul 2023)

Establishing SARS-CoV-2 membrane protein-specific antibodies as a valuable serological target via high-content microscopy

  • Daniel M. Williams,
  • Hailey R. Hornsby,
  • Ola M. Shehata,
  • Rebecca Brown,
  • Marta Gallis,
  • Naomi Meardon,
  • Thomas A.H. Newman,
  • Megan Plowright,
  • Domen Zafred,
  • Amber S.M. Shun-Shion,
  • Anthony J. Hodder,
  • Deepa Bliss,
  • Andrew Metcalfe,
  • James R. Edgar,
  • David E. Gordon,
  • Jon R. Sayers,
  • Martin J. Nicklin,
  • Miles Carroll,
  • Paul J. Collini,
  • Stephen Brown,
  • Thushan I. de Silva,
  • Andrew A. Peden

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 7
p. 107056

Abstract

Read online

Summary: The prevalence and strength of serological responses mounted toward SARS-CoV-2 proteins other than nucleocapsid (N) and spike (S), which may be of use as additional serological markers, remains underexplored. Using high-content microscopy to assess antibody responses against full-length StrepTagged SARS-CoV-2 proteins, we found that 85% (166/196) of unvaccinated individuals with RT-PCR confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections and 74% (31/42) of individuals infected after being vaccinated developed detectable IgG against the structural protein M, which is higher than previous estimates. Compared with N antibodies, M IgG displayed a shallower time-dependent decay and greater specificity. Sensitivity for SARS-CoV-2 seroprevalence was enhanced when N and M IgG detection was combined. These findings indicate that screening for M seroconversion may be a good approach for detecting additional vaccine breakthrough infections and highlight the potential to use HCM as a rapidly deployable method to identify the most immunogenic targets of newly emergent pathogens.

Keywords