| Literature DB >> 34646292 |
Jennifer Schwestka1, Julia König-Beihammer1, Yun-Ji Shin1, Ulrike Vavra1, Nikolaus F Kienzl1, Clemens Grünwald-Gruber2, Daniel Maresch2, Miriam Klausberger3, Elisabeth Laurent3,4, Maria Stadler5, Gabriele Manhart6, Jasmin Huber7, Manuela Hofner7, Klemens Vierlinger7, Andreas Weinhäusel7, Ines Swoboda8, Christoph J Binder9, Wilhelm Gerner5, Florian Grebien6, Friedrich Altmann2, Lukas Mach1, Eva Stöger1, Richard Strasser1.
Abstract
The receptor binding domain (RBD) of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein plays a key role in the virus-host cell interaction, and viral infection. The RBD is a major target for neutralizing antibodies, whilst recombinant RBD is commonly used as an antigen in serological assays. Such assays are essential tools to gain control over the pandemic and detect the extent and durability of an immune response in infected or vaccinated populations. Transient expression in plants can contribute to the fast production of viral antigens, which are required by industry in high amounts. Whilst plant-produced RBDs are glycosylated, N-glycan modifications in plants differ from humans. This can give rise to the formation of carbohydrate epitopes that can be recognized by anti-carbohydrate antibodies present in human sera. For the performance of serological tests using plant-produced recombinant viral antigens, such cross-reactive carbohydrate determinants (CCDs) could result in false positives. Here, we transiently expressed an RBD variant in wild-type and glycoengineered Nicotiana benthamiana leaves and characterized the impact of different plant-specific N-glycans on RBD reactivity in serological assays. While the overall performance of the different RBD glycoforms was comparable to each other and to a human cell line produced RBD, there was a higher tendency toward false positive results with sera containing allergy-related CCD-antibodies when an RBD carrying β1,2-xylose and core α1,3-fucose was used. These rare events could be further minimized by pre-incubating sera from allergic individuals with a CCD-inhibitor. Thereby, false positive signals obtained from anti-CCD antibodies, could be reduced by 90%, on average.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; SARS-CoV-2; allergen; cross-reactive carbohydrate determinant; glycosylation; posttranslational modification; virus
Year: 2021 PMID: 34646292 PMCID: PMC8503525 DOI: 10.3389/fpls.2021.747500
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Plant Sci ISSN: 1664-462X Impact factor: 6.627
FIGURE 1Production of RBD-215 glycoforms in Nicotiana benthamiana. (A) Schematic illustration of the expressed RBD-215 protein. The signal peptide (SP), N-glycosylation sites (N331 and N343) and the polyhistidine (6xHis) tag are indicated. (B) Cartoon illustration of the glycoengineering approach to produce the RBD-215 glycoforms. RBD-215 is expressed in wild-type (WT) or ΔXT/FT (ΔXF) plants. The Lewis A epitope is further attached by co-expression of β1,3-galactosyltransferase (GALT1) and α1,4-fucosyltransferase (FUT13). RBD-215 ΔXFA and RBD-215 WTA are RBD-215 variants carrying N-glycans with the Lewis A epitope. (C) RBD-215 glycoforms purified from the apoplastic fluid of infiltrated wild-type (WT) or ΔXT/FT (ΔXF) N. benthamiana leaves were subjected to SDS-PAGE under non-reducing conditions and stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue (CBB). (D) Immunoblot analysis of purified RBD-215 glycoforms with anti-His (His), anti-Lewis A (JIM84) and anti-β1,2-xylose and core α1,3-fucose (HRP) antibodies.
FIGURE 2The MS spectra of the RBD-215 glycopeptides carrying the N-glycosylation site N331 and N343. RBD-215 glycoforms were purified by IMAC from the apoplastic fluid 3 days after infiltration, LysC and GluC digested and analyzed by MS. Major N-glycan peaks are illustrated with a cartoon presentation. Nomenclature of N-glycans is according to the ProGlycAn system (http://www.proglycan.com/). Only one N-glycan isoform is indicated per peak.
FIGURE 3RBD-215 glycoforms display binding to ACE2-Fc. (A) ACE2-Fc ELISA. Binding curves of different concentrations of purified RBD-215 glycoforms and HEK293-derived tRBD (tRBD-HEK, positive control, Klausberger et al., 2021) to plates coated with ACE2-Fc. Values represent the mean ± SD (n = 3). (B) BLI analysis. Binding kinetics of the interaction between biotinylated ACE2-Fc loaded on SAX biosensors and SEC-purified monomeric RBD-215 glycoforms at a concentration range of 6.25–200 nM were determined. Representative real-time association and dissociation curves for RBD-215 ΔXF are shown. The individual curves show the association/dissociation at different concentrations of RBD-215 ΔXF. (C) KD values for the interactions between ACE2-Fc and the RBD-215 glycoforms. tRBD-HEK is included for comparison. Values represent the mean ± SEM (n = 3).
FIGURE 4IgG and IgM antibody binding to the RBD-215 variants. (A) Reactivity with convalescent sera (SARS-CoV-2 positive, n = 30) and pre-COVID controls (SARS-CoV-2 negative, n = 12) with RBD-215 glycoforms and HEK293-produced tRBD. Data give the mean of three blank-corrected replicates. (B,C) A bead-based multiplexed seroassay using 124 convalescent sera from individuals with previous SARS-CoV-2 infection and 210 pre-pandemic sera. Violin plots give the IgG (B) and IgM (C) immunoreactivity of individual sera as median fluorescence intensity (MFI). Lines indicate the median and quartiles. A non-parametric two-tailed Mann–Whitney U-test was used to compare group medians of pre-pandemic and convalescent sera. (D,E) An overlay of the areas under the receiver-operating characteristic curve (AUC-ROC) is given for the IgG (D) and IgM (E) seroreactivity of all RBD-215 glycoforms. To ease visualization, ROC curves were horizontally nudged in respect to the ROC curve of RBD-215 WT. (F,G) The positive/negative (P/N) ratio of the MFI readout of each convalescent serum compared to the median of the pre-pandemic group is given for IgG and IgM. Data on the courses of disease (as per self-assessment) were color-coded (green: asymptomatic-mild, blue-moderate, red-severe; n = 28). Mean ranks of all groups were compared using the non-parametric Kruskal–Wallis test, followed by a Dunn’s post hoc test.
FIGURE 5Detection of anti-carbohydrate antibodies binding to the RBD glycoforms. (A) Screening for anti-carbohydrate IgG antibodies in sera of SARS-CoV-2 positive (n = 30) and negative (n = 12) individuals. As antigen we used the N-glycan MUXF3 coupled to human serum albumin (MUXF3-HSA), because it represents a well-characterized model CCD, recognized by the vast majority of sera from CCD positive patients. Two (non-exposed) sera of allergic individuals sensitized to CCDs (allergic) served as positive controls. (B) Screening (IgE antibody reactivity) of a panel of sera from allergic individuals (CCD-positive, n = 15) to RBD-215 glycoforms, tRBD and MUXF-HSA. Sera from non-exposed non-allergic individuals (n = 6) served as negative controls. Data are presented as the mean of three replicates. Differences between seroreactivity to RBD-215 WT and RBD-215 ΔXF as well as for RBD-215 WTA and RBD-215 ΔXFA were tested for significance using a Student’s t-test (∗p < 0.05, ∗∗p < 0.01). The dashed line represents the mean from non-allergic sera plus three times the standard deviation. (C) IgG reactivity of allergic (n = 15), SARS-CoV-2 negative (n = 7) and of SARS-CoV-2 positive patients (n = 2) to the RBD-215 glycoforms, to MUXF-HSA and to tRBD. Data represent the mean of three blank-corrected replicates. The dashed line represents the mean from allergic sera to RBD-215 ΔXF/A plus three times the standard deviation.
FIGURE 6Inhibition of anti-carbohydrate IgG antibody binding by pre-incubation with MUXF3-HSA. Highly reactive sera were pre-incubated with different concentrations of MUXF3-HSA to block the binding to core α1,3-fucose and β1,2-xylose present on RBD-215 glycoforms produced in (A) wild-type and (B) ΔXT/FT plants and (C) HEK293 cells. The base line (dashed line) was defined as the highest signal obtained with HEK293-derived tRBD.