| Literature DB >> 32535078 |
Satish Chandra Pandey1, Veni Pande1, Diksha Sati2, Shobha Upreti2, Mukesh Samant3.
Abstract
The 2019-novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is caused by SARS-CoV-2 is transmitted from human to human has recently reported in China. Now COVID-19 has been spread all over the world and declared epidemics by WHO. It has caused a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. The elderly and people with underlying diseases are susceptible to infection and prone to serious outcomes, which may be associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and cytokine storm. Due to the rapid increase of SARS-CoV-2 infections and unavailability of antiviral therapeutic agents, developing an effective SAR-CoV-2 vaccine is urgently required. SARS-CoV-2 which is genetically similar to SARS-CoV and Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is an enveloped, single and positive-stranded RNA virus with a genome comprising 29,891 nucleotides, which encode the 12 putative open reading frames responsible for the synthesis of viral structural and nonstructural proteins which are very similar to SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV proteins. In this review we have summarized various vaccine candidates i.e., nucleotide, subunit and vector based as well as attenuated and inactivated forms, which have already been demonstrated their prophylactic efficacy against MERS-CoV and SARS-CoV, so these candidates could be used as a potential tool for the development of a safe and effective vaccine against SARS-CoV-2.Entities:
Keywords: Corona virus; Epidemics; MERS-CoV; SARS-CoV-2; Vaccine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32535078 PMCID: PMC7289747 DOI: 10.1016/j.lfs.2020.117956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life Sci ISSN: 0024-3205 Impact factor: 5.037
Fig. 1Mechanism of action of various vaccine candidates: I) Recombinant Virus Vector act as an endogenous antigen, thus after processing in the proteasome, they are presented by MHC I to the CD8+ Tc cells leading to Cell Mediated Immune (CMI) response; II) DNA Vaccine are transcribed and translated in the host cell, the protein synthesized then moves to MHC class I pathway or the protein would be released outside the host cell where it act as an exogenous antigen and are presented by MHC II to the CD4+ TH cells leading to humoral immune response, also release of some cytokines by TH cells leads to CMI response as well; III) mRNA vaccines exposed PAMP (Pathogen Associated Molecular Pattern)are recognized by the soluble PRR (Pathogen Recognition Receptor) endocytosed and lead to MHC class II pathway, Thus eliciting the humoral immune response.
The possible strengths and weaknesses of different types of vaccination strategies against SARS-CoV and MERS-CoV.
| Vaccines strategies | Vaccine candidates | Phase | Advantages | Disadvantages | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nucleotide based | Phase I,II ( | Simple, stable, safe and easy to produce, cost-effective; induce neutralizing antibodies; human monoclonal antibodies and cytotoxic T-lymphocyte response | Lower immunogenicity as compared to inactivated and live-attenuated virus vaccines; require any additional administration device | [ | |
| Phase I (mRNA-1273) and preclinical (BNT162) | Easy to design; manufacturing is a comparably short, simple, rapid and cost-effective; avoid the risk of host genomic integration; safer than inactivated or protein based vaccines as they are free from the risk of protein contamination or the injected virus to become active; induce both humoral and cellular immune responses | Unprotected naked mRNA alone is not very stable thus requires highly efficient carriers to stabilize and pack the mRNA into an injectable form | [ | ||
| Subunit vaccine | Spike glycoproteins (S), membrane proteins (M), nucleoproteins (N) | Preclinical | High safety profile; less prone to generate the side effects at the site of inoculation; involving pure antigens that only includes synthetic peptides or recombinant proteins that expresses only particular fragments of immunogen; consistent production; eliciting T and B cell mediated immunity | Require appropriate adjuvant; cost-effectiveness may vary; lower immunogenicity | [ |
| Recombinant vector vaccines | Coronavirus proteins/glycoproteins expressed by attenuated adenovirus/poxvirus/Newcastle disease virus | Phase I ( | Quickly constructed; Efficient in inducing immune response; ease of administration and production; elicit long-termed cell mediated and humoral immunity | Restricted cloning ability, limited host range and pre-existent immunity; route of administration that manifest different immune response; possible Th2-bias | [ |
| Attenuated vaccines | Gene deletion of various essential genes (S,N,E genes), nonstructural proteins (nsp) encoding genes | Preclinical | Persists for longer period of time, showcases the entire viral antigens complement to the host immune system, efficient in generating a strong cytotoxic T-cell response | Risk of reversion to its virulent form; requirement of cold chain; not appropriate for infants, immunocompromised or elderly individuals | [ |
| Inactivated virus vaccines | Inactivated or whole killed virus (WKV) | Preclinical | Rapid development; efficient in inducing immunity and protection against virus infection; efficiently neutralizes induction of antibody; can be formulated with different adjuvant | Hypersensitivity | [ |