Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/42181
Título : A universal design of betacoronavirus vaccines against COVID-19, MERS, and SARS
Autor: Dai, Lianpan
Zheng, Tianyi
Xu, Kun
Han, Yuxuan
Xu, Lili
Huang, Enqi
An, Yaling
Cheng, Yingjie
Li, Shihua
Liu, Mei
Yang, Mi
Li, Yan
Cheng, Huijun
Yuan, Yuan
Zhang, Wei
Ke, Changwen
Wong, Gary
Qi, Jianxun
Qin, Chuan
Yan, Jinghua
Gao, George F.
Palavras-chave: COVID-19
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2)
Middle East respiratory syndrome CoV (MERS-CoV)
Coronavirus
Betacoronavirus
Vaccine
Receptor-binding domain (RBD)
Publicador: Elsevier
Data da publicação: 2020
Referência: DAI, L. et al. A universal design of betacoronavirus vaccines against COVID-19, MERS, and SARS. Cell, [S.l.], 2020. No prelo.
Abstract: Vaccines are urgently needed to control the ongoing pandemic COVID-19 and previously emerging MERS/SARS caused by coronavirus (CoV) infections. The CoV spike receptor-binding domain (RBD) is an attractive vaccine target but is undermined by limited immunogenicity. We describe a dimeric form of MERS-CoV RBD that overcomes this limitation. The RBD-dimer significantly increased neutralizing antibody (NAb) titers compared to conventional monomeric form and protected mice against MERS-CoV infection. Crystal structure showed RBD-dimer fully exposed dual receptor-binding motifs, the major target for NAbs. Structure-guided design further yielded a stable version of RBD-dimer as a tandem repeat single-chain (RBD-sc-dimer) which retained the vaccine potency. We generalized this strategy to design vaccines against COVID-19 and SARS, achieving 10- to 100-fold enhancement of NAb titers. RBD-sc-dimers in pilot scale production yielded high yields, supporting their scalability for further clinical development. The framework of immunogen design can be universally applied to other beta-CoV vaccines to counter emerging threats.
URI: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0092867420308126
http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/42181
Idioma: en_US
Aparece nas coleções:FCS - Artigos sobre Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)

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