Countermeasures to prevent and treat COVID-19 are a global health priority. We enrolled a cohort of SARS-CoV-2-recovered participants, developed neutralization assays to interrogate antibody responses, adapted our high-throughput antibody generation pipeline to rapidly screen over 1800 antibodies, and established an animal model to test protection. We isolated potent neutralizing antibodies (nAbs) to two epitopes on the receptor binding domain (RBD) and to distinct non-RBD epitopes on the spike (S) protein. We showed that passive transfer of a nAb provides protection against disease in high-dose SARS-CoV-2 challenge in Syrian hamsters, as revealed by maintained weight and low lung viral titers in treated animals. The study suggests a role for nAbs in prophylaxis, and potentially therapy, of COVID-19. The nAbs define protective epitopes to guide vaccine design.
HIV-1 entry into CD4+ target cells is mediated by cleaved envelope glycoprotein (Env) trimers that have been challenging to characterize structurally. Here, we describe the crystal structure at 4.7 Å of an antigenically near-native, cleaved, stabilized, soluble Env trimer (termed BG505 SOSIP.664 gp140) in complex with a potent broadly neutralizing antibody, PGT122. The structure shows a pre-fusion state of gp41, the interaction between the component gp120 and gp41 subunits, and how a close association between the gp120 V1/V2/V3 loops stabilizes the trimer apex around the three-fold axis. The complete epitope of PGT122 on the trimer involves gp120 V1, V3 and several surrounding glycans. This trimer structure advances our understanding of how Env functions and is presented to the immune system, and provides a blueprint for structure-based vaccine design.
Vaccine development to induce broadly neutralizing antibodies (bNAbs) against HIV-1 is a
global health priority. Potent VRC01-class bNAbs against the CD4 binding site of HIV gp120 have been
isolated from HIV-1-infected individuals; however, such bNAbs have not been induced by vaccination.
Wild-type gp120 proteins lack detectable affinity for predicted germline precursors of VRC01-class
bNAbs, making them poor immunogens to prime a VRC01-class response. We employed computation-guided,
in vitro screening to engineer a germline-targeting gp120 outer domain immunogen that binds to
multiple VRC01-class bNAbs and their germline precursors. When multimerized on nanoparticles, this
immunogen (eOD-GT6) activates both germline and mature VRC01-class B cells. Thus, eOD-GT6
nanoparticles have promise as a vaccine prime candidate. In principle, similar germline-targeting
strategies can be applied to other epitopes and pathogens.
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