| Literature DB >> 35118479 |
Evan A Elko1, Georgia A Nelson2, Heather L Mead2, Erin J Kelley2, Virginia Le Verche3, Angelo A Cardoso3, Jennifer L Ely2, Annalee S Boyle2, Alejandra Piña1, Sierra N Henson2, Fatima Rahee2, Paul S Keim1, Kimberly R Celona1, Jinhee Yi1, Erik W Settles1, George C Yu4, Sheldon R Morris5, John A Zaia3, Jason T Ladner1, John A Altin2.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic has triggered the first widespread vaccination campaign against a coronavirus. Most vaccinated subjects are naïve to SARS-CoV-2, however almost all have previously encountered other coronaviruses (CoVs) and the role of this immunity in shaping the vaccine response remains uncharacterized. Here we use longitudinal samples and highly-multiplexed serology to identify mRNA-1273 vaccine-induced antibody responses against a range of CoV Spike epitopes and in both phylogenetically conserved and non-conserved regions. Whereas reactivity to SARS-CoV-2 epitopes showed a delayed but progressive increase following vaccination, we observed distinct kinetics for the endemic CoV homologs at two conserved sites in Spike S2: these became detectable sooner, and decayed at later timepoints. Using homolog-specific depletion and alanine-substitution experiments, we show that these distinctly-evolving specificities result from cross-reactive antibodies as they mature against rare, polymorphic residues within these epitopes. Our results reveal mechanisms for the formation of antibodies with broad reactivity against CoVs.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35118479 PMCID: PMC8811912 DOI: 10.1101/2022.01.24.22269542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: medRxiv