Elsevier

Vaccine

Volume 32, Issue 46, 21 October 2014, Pages 6170-6176
Vaccine

Searching for an ideal vaccine candidate among different MERS coronavirus receptor-binding fragments—The importance of immunofocusing in subunit vaccine design

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.vaccine.2014.08.086Get rights and content

Highlights

  • We express five MERS-CoV RBDs spanning S350-588, 358-588, 367-588, 377-606, and 377-588.

  • S377-588, 367-588 and 358-588 have the highest receptor binding ability than others.

  • S377-588 and 367-588 induced the highest-titer of IgG antibodies in mice.

  • S377-588 elicits highest neutralization in mice and high neutralization in rabbits.

  • S377-588 contains stably folded RBD structure and major neutralizing epitopes.

Abstract

The newly emerged Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) is currently spreading among humans, making development of effective MERS vaccines a high priority. A defined receptor-binding domain (RBD) in MERS-CoV spike protein can potentially serve as a subunit vaccine candidate against MERS-CoV infections. To identify an ideal vaccine candidate, we have constructed five different versions of RBD fragments, S350-588-Fc, S358-588-Fc, S367-588-Fc, S367-606-Fc, and S377-588-Fc (their names indicate their residue range in the spike protein and their C-terminal Fc tag), and further investigated their receptor binding affinity, antigenicity, immunogenicity, and neutralizing potential. The results showed that S377-588-Fc is among the RBD fragments that demonstrated the highest DPP4-binding affinity and induced the highest-titer IgG antibodies in mice. In addition, S377-588-Fc elicited higher-titer neutralizing antibodies than all the other RBD fragments in mice, and also induced high-titer neutralizing antibodies in immunized rabbits. Structural analysis suggests that S377-588-Fc contains the stably folded RBD structure, the full receptor-binding site, and major neutralizing epitopes, such that additional structures to this fragment introduce non-neutralizing epitopes and may also alter the tertiary structure of the RBD. Taken together, our data suggest that the RBD fragment encompassing spike residues 377-588 is a critical neutralizing receptor-binding fragment and an ideal candidate for development of effective MERS vaccines, and that adding non-neutralizing structures to this RBD fragment diminishes its neutralizing potential. Therefore, in viral vaccine design, it is important to identify the most stable and neutralizing viral RBD fragment, while eliminating unnecessary and non-neutralizing structures, as a means of “immunofocusing”.

Keywords

MERS
MERS-CoV
Spike protein
Receptor-binding domain
Critical neutralizing domain
Immunofocusing

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1

These authors contributed equally to this work.

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