Reference Database

YearReference
2023
Ad26.COV2.S and SARS-CoV-2 spike protein ferritin nanoparticle vaccine protect against SARS-CoV-2 Omicron BA.5 challenge in macaques.
Yu, Jingyou
Thomas, Paul V
Sciacca, Michaela
Wu, Cindy
Liu, Jinyan
He, Xuan
Miller, Jessica
Hachmann, Nicole P
Surve, Nehalee
McMahan, Katherine
Jacob-Dolan, Catherine
Powers, Olivia
Hall, Kevin
Barrett, Julia
Hope, David
Mazurek, Camille R
Murdza, Tetyana
Chang, William C
Golub, Emily
Rees, Phyllis A
Peterson, Caroline E
Hajduczki, Agnes
Chen, Wei-Hung
Martinez, Elizabeth J
Hussin, Elizabeth
Lange, Camille
Gong, Hua
Matyas, Gary R
Rao, Mangala
Suthar, Mehul
Boursiquot, Mona
Cook, Anthony
Pessaint, Laurent
Lewis, Mark G
Andersen, Hanne
Bolton, Diane L
Michael, Nelson L
Joyce, M Gordon
Modjarrad, Kayvon
Barouch, Dan H
Cell reports. Medicine 2023 Apr 18;4(4): 101018
Abstract

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) vaccines demonstrate reduced protection against acquisition of BA.5 subvariant but are still effective against severe disease. However, immune correlates of protection against BA.5 remain unknown. We report the immunogenicity and protective efficacy of vaccine regimens consisting of the vector-based Ad26.COV2.S vaccine and the adjuvanted spike ferritin nanoparticle (SpFN) vaccine against a high-dose, mismatched Omicron BA.5 challenge in macaques. The SpFNx3 and Ad26 + SpFNx2 regimens elicit higher antibody responses than Ad26x3, whereas the Ad26 + SpFNx2 and Ad26x3 regimens induce higher CD8 T cell responses than SpFNx3. The Ad26 + SpFNx2 regimen elicits the highest CD4 T cell responses. All three regimens suppress peak and day 4 viral loads in the respiratory tract, which correlate with both humoral and cellular immune responses. This study demonstrates that both homologous and heterologous regimens involving Ad26.COV2.S and SpFN vaccines provide robust protection against a mismatched BA.5 challenge in macaques.

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