Currently circulating #SARSCoV2 variants are evolving from the Omicron BA.2 and BA.5 lineages, through independent accumulation of amino acid mutations at shared receptor-binding domain (RBD) hot spots, underscoring the importance of antibody-mediated selective pressure.
2/
We first studied how mutations in the #SARSCoV2 BQ.1.1, XBB.1(.5) and BA.2.75.2 variants affect function. @AminAddetia@johnbowenbio in our lab previously showed that BA.5 affinity for ACE2 was >> Wu but fusogenicity was worse
We found that the (dominant) BQ.1.1 RBD and the BA.2.75.2 RBD have similar ACE2 binding affinity to the BA.5 RBD whereas XBB.1 RBD has lower ACE2 affinity (similar to Wu RBD).
Modulation results from off-rate differences, as we have seen throughout the pandemic
4/
We also observed that spike-mediated membrane fusion (leading to viral entry) is more efficient with BQ.1.1, XBB.1(.5) and BA.2.75.2 than previous Omicron variants, almost reaching Wu levels
5/
BQ.1.1 and BA.2.75.2 viral fitness is therefore not limited by ACE2 binding whereas the lower ACE2-binding affinity of XBB.1 might have limited its spread.
Recent data from @yunlong_cao showing enhanced ACE2 binding of XBB.1.5 (S486P) support this!
BA.1, BA.2 and BA.5 had altered cell entry pathway vs previous #SARSCoV2 strains, with Omicron variants entering preferentially through the endosomal entry route (cathepsin-mediated) as opposed to plasma membrane fusion (TMPRSS2-mediated) @GuptaR_lab
To assess the preferred cell entry route of currently circulating variants, we investigated the impact of protease inhibitors on spike-mediated entry into VeroE6-TMPRSS2 cells (enabling both plasma membrane and endosomal entry routes)
8/
Camostat and nafamostat (TMPRSS2 inhibitors) had limited impact on Omicron variants, including BQ.1.1, BA.2.75.2 and XBB.1, whereas E64d (cathepsin B/L inhibitor) reduced BA.1, BA.2 and BA.5 entry more than BA.2.75.2, BQ.1.1 or XBB.1, relative to Wu-G614
9/
Inefficient use of TMPRSS2 concurs with the identical BQ.1.1, BA.2.75.2 and XBB.1 S2 subunit sequences, including spike N969K which @PeacockFlu previously showed to account for preferred endosomal cell entry of prior Omicron variants (BA.2)
To reveal how amino acid substitutions in the BQ.1.1 and XBB.1 RBDs alter receptor recognition and key antigenic sites, we determined #cryoEM structures of the RBDs bound to ACE2 & S309 Fab (parent of the sotrovimab monoclonal antibody therapeutic)
11/
The R493Q reversion likely relieves repulsion with ACE2 residue K31 and restores a network of local interactions similar to that made with the Wu RBD
12/
These data provide a blueprint to contextualize deep-mutational scanning and mutagenesis data we recently reported in the context of the BA.1 and BA.2 RBD backgrounds with @tylernstarr@jbloom_lab
Our #cryoEM structures reveal how the BQ.1.1 K444T and the BQ.1.1/XBB.1 R346T would abrogate key electrostatic interactions with the LY-CoV1404 (bebtelovimab parent) and COV2-2130 (cilgavimab parent, Evushield cocktail), explaining dampened binding and neutralization
14/
We show how S309 binds both the BQ.1.1 and XBB.1 RBDs and accommodates the XBB.1 H339 residue in the epitope! S309 binding pose is indistinguishable from that observed when bound to the Wu/BA.1 RBDs
15/
The S371F mutation (BA.2, BA.5, BQ.1.1, XBB.1 and BA.2.75.2) changes conformation of the RBD helix 364-372 which becomes sterically incompatible with the glycan N343 conformation observed in S309-bound spike structures
The BQ.1.1 helix has a conformation similar to that in the S309-bound BA.1 structure, but distinct from apo BA.2 /BA.5 structures, and is disordered for XBB.1, indicative of conformational frustration upon S309 binding which could explain reduced neutralizing activity
17/
We found that S309 retains detectable neutralizing activity of currently circulating variants, including the rising XBB.1.5 and the dominant BQ.1.1, with potencies correlating with 1:1 Fab binding affinity to variant RBDs
18/
Sotrovimab (S309 derivative) IgG binds avidly to cell surface-expressed currently dominant Omicron #SARSCoV2 spike variants & promoted antibody-dependent cell cytotoxicity (ADCC) using primary natural killer effector cells (independently of 1:1 Fab affinity)!
19/
Prophylactic administration of S309 protected K18-hACE2 transgenic mice from weight loss and reduced both viral RNA and infectious virus titers in the lungs.
Despite marked reduction of in vitro neutralizing activity, S309 can protect mice from BQ.1.1 challenge!
20/
To assess the impact of the BQ1.1, XBB.1 and BA.2.75.2 S mutations on vaccine-elicited antibody responses, we quantified plasma neutralizing activity in various human cohorts infected and/or vaccinated with monovalent and bivalent mRNA vaccines
21/
Wu/BA.5 or Wu/BA.1 bivalent mRNA vaccinated subjects had detectable neutralizing activity vs vaccine-mismatched XBB.1, BA.2.75.2 and BQ.1.1 (w/wo prior infection) whereas little to no neutralization of these variants was detected for the Wu-only vaccinated subjects
22/
These data suggest that bivalent (Wu/BA.1 or Wu/BA.5) mRNA vaccination elicits more potent and broader antibody responses against vaccine-matched and mismatched Omicron variants than monovalent Wu mRNA vaccination in healthy subjects
23/
We further observed than vaccine-elicited polyclonal plasma antibodies retain comparable binding titers across all Omicron variants and that in some subjects they are triggering Fc effector functions against circulating Omicron variants.
24/
Analysis of memory B cell responses in these human cohorts showed that bivalent Wu/BA.5 mRNA vaccination enriches for MBCs that are cross-reactive with the vaccine-matched and mismatched RBD variants, relative to monovalent Wu mRNA vaccination, in line with neutralization.
25/
Surprisingly, few de novo elicited Omicron-specific memory B cells were detected even after two exposures to an Omicron spike via breakthrough infection followed by Wu/BA.5 bivalent mRNA vaccination.
26/
We did not detect any de novo elicited Omicron-specific memory B cells after Wu/BA.1 bivalent mRNA vaccination (w/wo Omicron infection) and most RBD-directed IgGs secreted by stimulated memory B cells cross-react with BA.1 and (to a lesser extent) with BQ.1.1 and XBB.1 RBDs
27/
Collectively, these data suggest that two Omicron spike exposures are not sufficient to overcome the immunological imprinting induced by repeated Wu spike exposures but does continue to enrich for memory B cells cross-reacting with multiple RBD variants
28/
In 2019, we proposed w @coronalexington @axiong_x that coronavirus entry into cells involves a spike (S) molecular ratcheting mechanism & discovered that antibodies could functionally mimic the receptor by inducing these S conformational changes
How many times did coronaviruses evolve the ability to use ACE2 as receptor for infection? Find out by reading this @biorxivpreprint in collab with Huan Yan (Wuhan Univ)
Led by Ma CB, Liu C @YoungjunPark11 Tang J & Chen J
We previously described the unexpected discovery that MERS-related coronaviruses (MERSr-CoVs) discovered in African bats use ACE2 as receptor instead of the MERS-CoV receptor DPP4 (as described in this thread )
It turns out that recently described MERSr-CoVs identified in European bats (MOW15-22 & PnNL2018B) with highly divergent receptor-binding motif (RBM) also use ACE2 but with a distinct and much narrower species tropism
A few months ago, we asked if imprinting impacts immune responses to the recently updated XBB.1.5 spike (S) #COVID19 booster? The peer-reviewed version of our manuscript is now available
@HHMINEWS @UWBiochemistry
During the review process, we added data showing elicitation of broadly neutralizing polyclonal plasma antibodies (Abs) against a wider ranger of #SARSCoV2 variants (now including HK.3 and JN.1) and at a later time point (~50 days post XBB.1.5 booster vaccination)
HKU1 was discovered in 2005 from a patient with pneumonia (it was circulating for ≥10 years) and is endemic in humans. HKU1 is an embecovirus, a subgenus for which the entry process into cells is less well understood than for most other betaCoVs such as #SARSCoV2
2/26
Recently, @Virus_Immunity @JBuchrieser @virusfusion007 and colleagues showed that human TMPRSS2 is an entry receptor for HKU1
Coronavirus spike (S) glycoproteins comprise the S1 subunit, which mediates attachment to host receptor(s), and the S2 subunit (fusion machinery) that promotes fusion of the viral and host membranes to initiate infection
2/22
The S2 subunit (fusion machinery) is much more conserved than the S1 subunit (comprising the RBD and NTD), and harbors several antigenic sites targeted by broadly neutralizing and protective monoclonal antibodies (Abs)
Immune imprinting - AKA original antigenic sin - describes how the first exposure to a virus shapes the immunological outcome of subsequent exposures to antigenically related strains.
2/18
Last year, we showed that Omicron infection of Wuhan-Hu-1 (Wu) mRNA vaccinees recalls cross-reactive memory B cells specific for epitopes shared by multiple #SARSCoV2 variants rather than priming naive B cells binding Omicron RBD-specific epitopes