Strategy to develop broadly effective multivalent COVID-19 vaccines against emerging variants based on Ad5/35 platform

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Title
Strategy to develop broadly effective multivalent COVID-19 vaccines against emerging variants based on Ad5/35 platform
Author(s)
S Chang; K S Shin; B Park; S Park; J Shin; H Park; I K Jung; J H Kim; S E Bae; J O Kim; Seung Ho BaekGreen KimJung Joo Hong; H Seo; E Volz; C Y Kang
Bibliographic Citation
Proceedings of National Academy of Sciences of United States of America, vol. 121, no. 10, pp. e231368112-e231368112
Publication Year
2024
Abstract
The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) Omicron strain has evolved into highly divergent variants with several sub-lineages. These newly emerging variants threaten the efficacy of available COVID-19 vaccines. To mitigate the occurrence of breakthrough infections and re-infections, and more importantly, to reduce the disease burden, it is essential to develop a strategy for producing updated multivalent vaccines that can provide broad neutralization against both currently circulating and emerging variants. We developed bivalent vaccine AdCLD-CoV19-1 BA.5/BA.2.75 and trivalent vaccines AdCLD-CoV19-1 XBB/BN.1/BQ.1.1 and AdCLD-CoV19-1 XBB.1.5/BN.1/BQ.1.1 using an Ad5/35 platform-based non-replicating recombinant adenoviral vector. We compared immune responses elicited by the monovalent and multivalent vaccines in mice and macaques. We found that the BA.5/BA.2.75 bivalent and the XBB/BN.1/BQ.1.1 and XBB.1.5/BN.1/BQ.1.1 trivalent vaccines exhibited improved cross-neutralization ability compared to their respective monovalent vaccines. These data suggest that the developed multivalent vaccines enhance immunity against circulating Omicron subvariants and effectively elicit neutralizing antibodies across a broad spectrum of SARS-CoV-2 variants.
Keyword
SARS-CoV-2 variants?COVID-19 vaccine?Multivalent vaccine?Chimeric adenovirus-vectored vaccine?Neutralizing activity
ISSN
0027-8424
Publisher
Natl Acad Sciences
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2313681121
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Ochang Branch Institute > Division of National Bio-Infrastructure > National Primate Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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