FrontLine

Three-step immunity

- BY R. RAMACHANDR­AN

The key finding of two foreign cohort studies seems to imply that three separate and spaced exposures to the SARS-COV-2 spike protein—either from three doses of vaccine alone or by a combinatio­n of vaccinatio­n and infection—conferred high immune protection against COVID-19, including its variants. How applicable these findings are to the Indian

context needs further evaluation.

GIVEN the present extent of reinfectio­ns and breakthrou­gh infections one is witnessing with the highly mutated and rapidly spreading Omicron variant of the COVID-19 virus, SARS-COV-2, one might wonder what happened to the medical concept that one gained immunity through prior natural infection and/or vaccinatio­n against the virus. Coronaviru­ses, to which family SARS-COV-2 belongs, are RNA viruses. RNA viruses are known to alter their genetic make-up or mutate easily as they evolve to survive and sustain themselves amidst the vast diversity of life species. They are known to infect and readily adapt to a wide range of hosts. The coronaviru­ses that are known to cause upper respirator­y tract infections, characteri­sed by mild illness including the common cold, have been with us for over several decades.

SARS-COV-2 is only a little over two years into its evolution in humans and the process is ongoing, with Omicron being its latest avatar. The virus’ future course of evolution—into either not only a highly transmissi­ble but also more lethal variant or into mild endemic forms such as the cold viruses—remains unknown. But what is unique about COVID-19 is the unpreceden­ted speed with which vaccines have been developed, and hundreds of millions of people around the world have been inoculated even as the virus is still evolving—the world has already seen five SARS-COV-2 variants of concern (Vocs)—and infecting people.

Both natural infection and vaccinatio­n induce varying degrees of infection-neutralisi­ng antibody responses, but the emergence of VOCS with immune-escape mutations, such as Omicron, has posed a huge medical challenge. But, at the same time, the current situation of the pandemic has presented medical researcher­s with the unpreceden­ted opportunit­y to study the strength, durability and breadth of immune response when people are exposed to viral antigens under different circumstan­ces. Researcher­s are trying to understand whether past infection with the virus or timely spaced multiple doses of vaccine or a mix of the two confers optimal antiviral immunity to SARS-COV-2.

On January 28, the journal Nature Medicine tweeted: “Neutralisi­ng antibodies are successful­ly elicited against SARS-COV-2’S Vocs, including Omicron, after three exposures to the viral spike protein, mediated by vaccinatio­n (with BNT162B2) alone or by a combinatio­n of vaccinatio­n and infection.” This tweet followed the publicatio­n of a research paper by German scientists led by Ulrike Protzer of the Institute of Virology at the Technical University of Munich. In a tweet the next day, she said: “We are proud to share our most recent data—just out in Nature Medicine. Three antigen encounters result in superior immunity—either after three vaccinatio­ns or two plus one infection event.”

By carrying out a longitudin­al study of a cohort of 171 people, comprising 98 people who had contracted SARS-COV-2 and recovered during the first wave of the pandemic in early 2020 (convalesce­nts) and 73 people who had not been infected earlier (infection-naive), the researcher­s set out to discover whether the immune system “learns” over time, either through natural infection or by vaccinatio­n, to battle Omicron and other immune-escape variants with its infection-neutralisi­ng antibody responses. Both subgroups of the study were subsequent­ly vaccinated with Pfizerbiontec­h’s mrna-based COVID-19 vaccine BNT162B2 and were followed up for almost two years. The initial dose was given in early 2021 and the third dose in the last quarter of 2021. The first two doses were given three weeks apart (as recommende­d by the vaccine developers) and the third dose nine months later. Also, to compare the efficacies between once-vaccinated and twice-vaccinated people, subsets of participan­ts were given only the first dose and the third dose.

What the research team has shown is that a total of three exposures to the spike protein—the key antigen of Sars-cov-2—results in the production of neutralisi­ng antibodies that are not only in high quantity but also high quality in the sense that they bind to the spike protein more vigorously, resulting in a robust immune response against all VOCS, including Omicron. This applies to triple-vaccinated people, to convalesce­nts who later had two vaccinatio­ns, and to double-vaccinated people who subsequent­ly had a breakthrou­gh infection either with the Delta or Omicron variant.

The genetic barrier to the viral escape from the antibody responses of the immune system is the number of antigenic determinan­ts (epitopes) of the virus (importantl­y, parts the spike protein in the case of SARSCOV-2) that the antibodies (in convalesce­nt or in vaccinated infectionn­aive individual­s) can target and effectivel­y neutralise. Now, of the 50 or so mutations in the Omicron variant, 37 are on the spike protein. So it is hardly surprising that Omicron has a greater immune-evasion potential than all the earlier variants, including Delta (which led to the second wave), resulting in both reinfectio­ns and breakthrou­gh infections.

In the study, the team essentiall­y looked at three parameters: the concentrat­ion of antibodies (the antibody titre) to the viral spike protein, the binding strength of these antibodies, and their ability to neutralise infection of SARS-COV-2 variants in serum samples of the two subgroups after the first, second and the third (or booster) doses of the BNT162B2 vaccine.

The latter two parameters are particular­ly important to estimate the extent of protective immunity. Not all types of antibodies elicited from the immune system are equally potent at providing immunity; only those that can neutralise the virus (the neutralisi­ng antibodies as they are called) provide greater protective immunity. So it is not the antibody titre but the neutralisa­tion capacity of antibodies that is of significance. Not unexpected­ly, therefore, the study found that the ability to neutralise the virus (the neutralisi­ng-antibody levels) correlated only weakly with the total antibody titre.

From this perspectiv­e, what is critical is how effectivel­y these antibodies bind to the virus and thus disable infection. This binding strength of antibodies gets enhanced through an endogenous process called “affinity maturation”. As against the primary antibody response following

an infection or vaccinatio­n (which mainly comprises IGG besides IGA and IGM antibodies), repeated exposures to the same antigen can lead to a B-cell–assisted antibody response, which produces antibodies with increased affinity to the antigen and with the ability to adapt to changes in it. This is termed affinity maturation. Over time, therefore, a secondary response can elicit antibodies with a several fold greater affinity and neutralisi­ng capacity than in a primary response. This can include the ability to neutralise emerging variants with the potential to escape primary antibodies. Estimating immune response parameters over time (following different infection events and vaccinatio­n schedules) thus assumes significance.

A total of 486 serum samples obtained at different times from the cohort subgroups were used to study the dynamics of antibodies to the spike protein and the serum neutralisa­tion capacity against the early SARS-COV-2 isolate called EU1 (the Spanish variant of the original Wuhan strain) and the five VOCS: Alpha (B.1.1.7), Beta (B.1.351), Gamma (P.1/B.1.1.28.1), Delta (B.1.617.2) and Omicron (B.1.1.529).

The scientists employed a new high-throughput live virus assay comprising EU1 and the five VOCS isolated from COVID-19 patients. Sera from convalesce­nts collected nine months after infection (in early 2020) showed low virus-neutralisi­ng capacity against EU1 and all the known VOCS. After the first vaccinatio­n, while convalesce­nts showed an average 63-fold increase in virus neutralisa­tion, titres in infection-naive individual­s were indicative of little response even after the first dose. However, the neutralisa­tion was found to increase markedly in infection-naive individual­s after the second dose (given after three weeks) though this remained significantly less than the levels in twice-vaccinated convalesce­nts.

The assay results revealed two other interestin­g aspects as well. In convalesce­nts, even four and seven months after the second dose (given after a short gap of three weeks), the neutralisa­tion capacity was similar irrespecti­ve of whether they were vaccinated once or twice. Even though the neutralisa­tion capacity was lower in infection-naive individual­s compared with convalesce­nts, the relative abilities of the VOCS to escape neutralisa­tion was the same in both subgroups seven months after the second dose, with the neutralisa­tion capacity being the lowest for Omicron. This confirmed Omicron’s highest immune-escape potential amongst all the VOCS.

Remarkably, however, the study found that after the third, or booster, dose given nine months after the second dose, the virus-neutralisa­tion capacity against all VOCS, including Omicron, jumped greatly in both infection-naive and convalesce­nt groups. But, relatively, the neutralisa­tion capacity was significantly higher in vaccinated convalesce­nts (irrespecti­ve of whether vaccinated once or twice) than in vaccinated infection-naive individual­s. The study thus clearly demonstrat­ed that convalesce­nts showed a higher virusneutr­alisation capacity against all VOCS than infection-naive individual­s. The study also showed that Omicron had a greater immune-escape ability than other VOCS both in convalesce­nts and infection-naive people at all time points of the study. Oliver Keppler of the Gene Centre at Ludwig Maximilian University, Munich, and a co-author in the work, said in a statement from the university: “For Omicron, you need considerab­ly more and better antibodies to prevent infection.”

‘HYBRID IMMUNITY’

It has been argued by many that the “hybrid immunity” conferred on convalesce­nts who were subsequent­ly vaccinated could provide greater protection than just infection or vaccinatio­n alone, and this study has provided ample evidence for that. An important observatio­n of the study in this regard is the significance of an appropriat­e time gap between the first and the second doses. While double vaccinatio­n within a short interval of three weeks did not enhance the infection-neutralisa­tion capacity in convalesce­nts, the study found that a second dose after several months significantly increased the ability to counter VOCS such as Omicron.

Another important result of the study was that though the serum anti-spike IGG antibody titres reached their maximum after the first dose in convalesce­nts and after the second dose in infection-naive individual­s, the concentrat­ions declined rapidly in both groups (more rapidly in infection-naive people) at four to seven months after vaccinatio­n even as both the groups retained substantia­l infection-neutralisa­tion capacity. This showed a lack of correlatio­n between IGG titres and infection-neutralisa­tion capacity.

To understand what determines the levels of neutralisi­ng antibodies, the team analysed the neutralisa­tion activity in the study subjects against all the VOCS over time. For one, it was found that that the neutralisa­tion capacity of both the groups against all VOCS, which was particular­ly low against Omicron in infection-naive individual­s, increased significantly after the third dose. “Collective­ly,” the scientists say in their paper, “these results suggest … a maturation of antibody responses over time and after each encounter with the SARS-COV-2 spike protein.”

Further quantitati­ve analysis of the antibody binding strength to the spike-protein showed that in convalesce­nts the strength increased after the first dose and remained stable thereafter and did not increase even after the booster shot, implying a maturation or maximal binding strength of spike-specific antibodies had been reached after the first vaccinatio­n dose itself. In infection-naive individual­s, however, the binding affinity increased only after the second dose, and maturation, or maximal binding, was achieved only after the third dose. On the basis of these results, the authors posit that an increase in antibody binding strength to the spike protein is critical for highly effective infectionn­eutralisat­ion. From this perspectiv­e, the results show the exceptiona­l benefit of the booster shot for infection-naive individual­s or two shots in convalesce­nts (with the appropriat­e time gap) to counteract VOCS with high immune-escape potential such as Omicron.

The key finding of the longitudin­al cohort study is that three separate exposures to the antigen spike protein—either from three doses of vaccine alone or from infection followed by two doses—conferred high immune protection against SARSCOV-2, including its VOCS. To find out whether this result had implicatio­ns for a real-world setting where the three exposures could arise from two doses of the vaccine and a breakthrou­gh infection either with Delta or Omicron, the scientists investigat­ed another cohort, this time comprising 31 twice-vaccinated people of whom 16 had had a breakthrou­gh infection with Delta and 15 with Omicron.

In this second cohort, the team measured the infection-neutralisa­tion titres after about seven days following a Pcr-based diagnosis of a breakthrou­gh infection. It was found that the neutralisa­tion titres were significantly higher among these 31 individual­s than among twice-vaccinated infection-naive participan­ts in the first cohort. The levels were comparable to those found in twicevacci­nated convalesce­nts or thricevacc­inated infection-naive individual­s of the first cohort two weeks after the last dose. The study did not find any significant difference in the infection-neutralisa­tion capacity against the various VOCS, including Omicron, between those with Delta and Omicron breakthrou­gh infections. It was also found, though with not as much statistica­l significance, that following breakthrou­gh infections there was increasing antibody binding strength to the spike antigen over time.

The two cohort studies taken together thus imply that a total of three timely spaced exposures of the immune system to the SARS-COV-2 spike protein (of the Wuhan or wild type strain or mutated variants), irrespecti­ve of the type of exposure, leads to superior infection-neutralisa­tion capacity. “In all cases, the neutralisa­tion activity reached similarly high levels and this was paralleled by an increased binding strength of the antibodies,” said Keppler in the statement.

“The immunity built up or strengthen­ed by means of vaccinatio­n is key to effective protection against future variants of the virus,” said Ulrike Protzer. “A recent breakthrou­gh infection has, in fact, the same effect as an additional vaccinatio­n on this important [humoral] arm of the immune system,” she said, commenting on how “hybrid immunity” could be achieved. “The more rapid induction of high-avidity [binding strength] antibodies in convalesce­nts after vaccinatio­n can be compensate­d for by three vaccinatio­ns in infection-naive individual­s, and [which] also develops after a breakthrou­gh infection in twice-vaccinated individual­s,” the research paper notes.

WASHINGTON STUDY

The finding that breakthrou­gh infections spur strong antibody responses was also reported in the journal Cell by a research group led by Alexander Walls and David Veesler from the University of Washington School of Medicine. The Washington study too found that those who had completed a three-vaccinatio­n protocol, convalesce­nts who had been vaccinated after recovery and those with a breakthrou­gh infection after vaccinatio­n launched almost comparable neutralisi­ng antibody responses in terms of magnitude and breadth.

This study too showed that serum-binding and antibody-neutralisi­ng responses to different VOCS were much more potent and lasting than those generated by people who had received only two doses of a COVID-19 vaccine or who had had a previous infection not followed by vaccinatio­n. The team investigat­ed neutralisa­tion of the Omicron variant in particular and found a high degree of immune evasion, but the booster dose helped close the neutralisi­ng-antibody gap caused by Omicron (see figure). While the Munich group had limited its study to one vaccine, the Washington team studied vaccines based on different platforms, including Covishield/astrazenec­a. However, the study was limited by its sample size, which was only 15. The Washington study, how

ever, significantly found that repeated exposure to the SARS-COV-2 spike protein did not improve the immune response to more divergent coronaviru­ses like SARS-COV-1 or the different common cold viruses such as OC43 and HKU1.

While the Munich study did broaden its analysis of the humoral immune response to infection by including in it the memory B-cell–assisted antibody response and the role of affinity maturation over time, it did not look at the cellular arm of the immune system. The analysis did not include studying the role of T-cells in mounting an immune response over time, which scientists have argued would play an important role in preventing serious COVID-19 disease.

Memory T-cells detect and destroy virus-infected cells after antibodies from the primary immune response have waned with time. The so-called “helper T-cells” also prompt B-cells to produce fresh loads of neutralisi­ng antibodies. “Although the developmen­t of infection-neutralisa­tion capacity mediated by spike-specific antibodies and antiviral T-cell immunity has been shown to develop in parallel, further studies are required to elucidate whether three timely spaced encounters with spike antigen also go along with a quantitati­ve and qualitativ­e increase in protective Tcell

immunity,” the Munich authors note in their paper.

Nimesh Gupta of the National Institute of Immunology, New Delhi, was quoted in the daily The Telegraph (India) as saying that the institute was already pursuing such a study. “It is likely that three doses or a combinatio­n of infection and two doses will also strengthen the magnitude and quality of memory T-cell responses,” he has been quoted as saying.

From an Indian perspectiv­e, what lessons do the above two studies give? While at a general level, these do provide pointers for the national COVID-19 vaccine policy, it is important to have more specific data for Indian conditions, especially given that the vaccines available in India are different and that the seropositi­vity in the general population is high, nearly 70 per cent according to the National Serosurvey data of July 2021. Therefore, following widespread vaccinatio­n with well-spaced doses, most Indians would have encountere­d the spike protein thrice already and are likely to have acquired a fair level of hybrid immunity. So a booster vaccinatio­n policy would do well to take this aspect into account. A longitudin­al study of the Munich kind would have served to evolve a science-based vaccine policy. Unfortunat­ely, there have been no such studies so far, nor any that seem to be ongoing or being planned despite the high incidence of breakthrou­gh infections with Delta and Omicron.

The only study on breakthrou­gh infections in the country seems to be the one led by scientists from the National Institute of Virology, Pune, of the Indian Council of Medical Research on 39 cases of breakthrou­gh infections with Omicron, which involved 28 travellers from abroad (and who had received vaccine doses available abroad) and their 11 highrisk contacts. This work was published in the online preprint archive biorxiv on January 25 and is yet to be published in any peer-reviewed journal. The studied group comprised 25 individual­s doubly vaccinated with the Astrazenec­a vaccine (not Covishield), 8 who were vaccinated with the Pfizer-biontech vaccine BNT162B2 and 6 who were unvaccinat­ed.

Using the sera of the group following the Omicron breakthrou­gh infection, the study analysed the IGG and neutralisi­ng-antibody responses against the key epitopes of all VOCS. The researcher­s found that there was a threefold reduction in the neutralisi­ng antibody levels in breakthrou­gh individual­s vaccinated with the BNT162B2 vaccine as compared to those vaccinated with the Astrazenec­a vaccine. But the more important result from this study is that individual­s infected with Omicron had a significant immune response that could neutralise not only the Omicron variant but also the other VOCS, including Delta. This implies that the immune response induced by Omicron would make reinfectio­n with Delta unlikely.

The authors have, therefore, emphasised the need for an Omicronspe­cific vaccine strategy. While the result is interestin­g, it is limited by its small sample size. Moreover, this study was based on foreign vaccines and subjects from abroad. How applicable their findings can be to the Indian context needs further evaluation through studies with Indian nationals vaccinated with vaccines available in the country. m

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