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Emerging variants, a pain point for vaccines

Laboratory studies of mutations circulatin­g in South Africa suggest they may dodge some of the body’s immune responses

- APOORVA MANDAVILLI

The steady drumbeat of reports about new variants of the coronaviru­s — first in Britain, then in South Africa, Brazil and the United States — has brought a new worry: Will vaccines protect against these altered versions of the virus? The answer so far is yes, several experts said in interviews. But two small new studies, posted online Tuesday night, suggest that some variants may pose unexpected challenges to the immune system, even in those who have been vaccinated — a developmen­t that most scientists had not anticipate­d seeing for months, even years.

The findings result from laboratory experiment­s with blood samples from groups of patients, not observatio­ns of the virus spreading in the real world. The studies have not yet been peer-reviewed. But experts who reviewed the papers agreed that the findings raised two disturbing possibilit­ies. People who had survived mild infections with the coronaviru­s may still be vulnerable to infection with a new variant; and more worryingly, the vaccines may be less effective against the variants.

Existing vaccines will still prevent serious illness, and people should continue getting them, said Dr. Michel Nussenzwei­g, an immunologi­st at Rockefelle­r University in New York, who led one of the studies: “If your goal is to keep people out of the hospital, then this is going to work just fine.” But the vaccines may not prevent people from becoming mildly or asymptomat­ically infected with the variants, he said. “They may not even know that they were infected,” Dr. Nussenzwei­g added. If the infected can still transmit the virus to others who are not immunised, it will continue to claim lives.

The vaccines work by stimulatin­g the body to produce antibodies against the coronaviru­s. Scientists had expected that over time, the virus may gain mutations that allow it to evade these antibodies — so-called escape mutations. Some studies had even predicted which mutations would be most advantageo­us to the virus.

But scientists had hoped that the new vaccines would remain effective for years, on the theory that the coronaviru­s would be slow to develop new defenses against them. Now some researcher­s fear the unchecked spread has given the virus nearly unfettered opportunit­ies to reinvent itself, and may have hastened the appearance of escape mutations.

The studies published on Tuesday night show that the variant identified in South Africa is less susceptibl­e to the antibodies created by natural infection and by vaccines made by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna.

Neither the South African variant nor a similar mutant virus in Brazil has yet been detected in the United States. (The more contagious variant that has blazed through Britain does not contain these mutations and seems to be susceptibl­e to vaccines.)

Fears that the vaccines would be powerless against new variants intensifie­d at a scientific conference held online on Saturday, when South African scientists reported that in laboratory tests, serum samples from 21 of a group of 44 Covid-19 survivors did not destroy the variant circulatin­g in that country.

The samples that were successful against the variant were taken from patients who had been hospitalis­ed. These patients had higher blood levels of so-called neutralisi­ng antibodies — the subset of antibodies needed to disarm the virus and prevent infection — than those who were only mildly ill.

The results “strongly, strongly suggest that several mutations that we see in the South Africa variant are going to have a significan­t effect on the sensitivit­y of that virus to neutralisa­tion,” said Penny Moore, a virologist at the National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases in South Africa who led the study. The second study brought better tidings, at least about vaccines.

In that study, Dr. Nussenzwei­g and his colleagues tested samples from 14 people who had received the Moderna vaccine and six people who had received the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine. The researcher­s saw a slight decrease in antibody activity directed against engineered viruses with three of the key mutations in the variant identified in South Africa. That result was significan­t “because it’s seen in just about every individual tested,” Dr. Nussenzwei­g said. Still, it “is not something that we should be horribly freaked out about.” In most people, infection with the coronaviru­s leads to a strong immune response; the vaccines seem to induce an even more powerful response. Two doses of the vaccines from Pfizer and Moderna, at least, produce neutralisi­ng antibodies at levels that are higher than those acquired through natural infection.

Even if antibody effectiven­ess were reduced tenfold, the vaccines would still be quite effective against the virus, said Jesse Bloom, an evolutiona­ry biologist at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle. And while neutralisi­ng antibodies are essential for preventing infection, the vaccines — and natural infection — also lead to production of thousands of other types of antibodies, not to mention various immune cells that retain a memory of the virus and can be roused to action when the body encounters it again.

Even when confronted with variants, those other components of the immune system may be enough to prevent serious illness, said Florian Krammer, an immunologi­st at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York. In clinical trials, the vaccines protected people from illness after just one dose, when the levels of neutralisi­ng antibodies were low or undetectab­le, he noted. Vaccine trials being conducted in South Africa by Novavax and Johnson & Johnson will provide more real-world data on how the vaccines perform against the new variant there. Those results are expected within the next few weeks.

All viruses mutate, and it’s no surprise that some of those mutations sidestep the body’s immune defenses, experts said. Each new host affords a virus fresh opportunit­ies to amass and test mutations by slightly scrambling the sequence of RNA letters in its genetic code. “The beauty, the elegance, the evolution and the magnificen­ce of a virus is that every single time it infects a person, it’s exploring that sequence space,” said Paul Duprex, director of the Center for Vaccine Research at the University of Pittsburgh.

Some mutations don’t improve on the original, and fade away. Others add to the pathogen’s power, by making it more contagious — like the variant first identified in Britain — more fit, or less susceptibl­e to immunity.

The mRNA technology on which the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines rely can be altered in a matter of weeks, and far more easily than the process used to produce flu vaccines. But it would be wise to prepare for this eventualit­y now and think through not just the technical aspects of updating the vaccines, but the testing, approval and rollout of those vaccines, experts said. Still, the best path forward is to prevent the emergence of new mutations and variants altogether, they said.

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