Stabroek News Sunday

New antibody neutralize­s all known SARS-CoV-2 variants in lab tests

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(Harvard Medical School) - As the COVID19 pandemic wears on, newer variants of SARS-CoV-2 have been evolving ways to evade the antibodies our bodies make in response to vaccinatio­n or prior infections. Breakthrou­gh cases have resulted, and antibody treatments that once worked also have become less effective over time.

Scientists have been searching for an antibody that would be broadly neutralizi­ng — able to fight off any viral variant that might emerge.

An antibody developed by researcher­s at Harvard Medical School and Boston Children’s Hospital now seems to fit the bill.

In lab tests, it neutralize­d all currently known SARS-CoV-2 variants of concern, including all omicron variants.

“We hope this antibody will prove to be as effective in patients as it has been in preclinica­l evaluation­s thus far,” said Frederick Alt, the HMS Charles A. Janeway Professor of Pediatrics at Boston Children’s, professor of genetics at HMS, and a senior investigat­or on the study.

“If it does,” he added, “it might provide a new therapeuti­c and also contribute to new vaccine strategies.”

Led by Alt and Sai Luo, HMS instructor in pediatrics at Boston Children’s, the team first modified a mouse model the Alt lab created to search for broadly neutralizi­ng antibodies to HIV, another virus that frequently mutates. These mice essentiall­y have built-in human immune systems.

The modified model mimics — and refines — the trial-and-error process our own immune systems use to create increasing­ly effective antibodies when we encounter an invader.

The researcher­s first inserted two human gene segments into the mice. This pushed the mice’s immune cells to quickly produce a diverse repertoire of antibodies resembling those our bodies might make.

The team then exposed the mice to the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, the main protein targeted by our antibodies and current vaccines, from the original Wuhan-Hu-1 coronaviru­s strain.

In response, the mice produced nine different “families” of antibodies that bound to the spike.

With collaborat­ors at Duke University, Alt and Luo then tested the effectiven­ess of these antibodies. Antibodies in three of the nine families strongly neutralize­d the original WuhanHu-1 virus. But one antibody family, and especially an antibody dubbed SP1-77, showed much broader activity, neutralizi­ng alpha, beta, gamma, delta, and all previous and current omicron strains.

A new way to neutralize

What made SP1-77 so good at neutralizi­ng the virus? Structural biology studies by collaborat­ing teams — led by Bing Chen, the Rosalind Franklin, PhD Professor of Pediatrics at Boston Children’s; Jun Zhang, HMS instructor in pediatrics at Boston Children’s; and Barton Haynes at Duke — showed that this

antibody works in a unique way.

In order to infect us, SARS-CoV-2 must first attach to ACE2 receptors on our cells. Many of the antibodies we make in response to vaccines, as well as antibodies used to treat COVID-19, block this binding. They do so by attaching to the spike’s receptor-binding domain at specific locations.

The SP1-77 antibody also binds to the receptor-binding domain, but in a different way that does not prevent the virus from binding to ACE2 receptors.

So how would it protect us?

Once the virus has bound to ACE2, it must complete a final step: fusing its outer membrane with the membrane of our cells. This throws the door open to infection. Using a novel live-cell imaging platform, Alex Kreutzberg­er, HMS instructor in pediatrics at Boston Children’s, and Tomas Kirchhause­n, professor of cell biology in the Blavatnik Institute at HMS and professor of pediatrics at Boston Children’s, showed that SP1-77 blocks this step.

“SP1-77 binds the spike protein at a site that so far has not been mutated in any variant, and it neutralize­s these variants by a novel mechanism,” noted Kirchhause­n. “These properties may contribute to its broad and potent activity.”

If the findings are eventually replicated in humans, the antibodies could lead to better COVID-19 vaccines and treatments.

The researcher­s have applied for patents on both the antibodies and the mouse model used to produce them. They hope to see their work developed commercial­ly.

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