Evaluation of Serologic and Antigenic Relationships Between Middle Eastern Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus and Other Coronaviruses to Develop Vaccine Platforms for the Rapid Response to Emerging Coronaviruses
Open Access
- 18 November 2013
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The Journal of Infectious Diseases
- Vol. 209 (7) , 995-1006
- https://doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jit609
Abstract
Background. Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) emerged in 2012, causing severe acute respiratory disease and pneumonia, with 44% mortality among 136 cases to date. Design of vaccines to limit the virus spread or diagnostic tests to track newly emerging strains requires knowledge of antigenic and serologic relationships between MERS-CoV and other CoVs. Methods. Using synthetic genomics and Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus replicons (VRPs) expressing spike and nucleocapsid proteins from MERS-CoV and other human and bat CoVs, we characterize the antigenic responses (using Western blot and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay) and serologic responses (using neutralization assays) against 2 MERS-CoV isolates in comparison with those of other human and bat CoVs. Results. Serologic and neutralization responses against the spike glycoprotein were primarily strain specific, with a very low level of cross-reactivity within or across subgroups. CoV N proteins within but not across subgroups share cross-reactive epitopes with MERS-CoV isolates. Our findings were validated using a convalescent-phase serum specimen from a patient infected with MERS-CoV (NA 01) and human antiserum against SARS-CoV, human CoV NL63, and human CoV OC43. Conclusions. Vaccine design for emerging CoVs should involve chimeric spike protein containing neutralizing epitopes from multiple virus strains across subgroups to reduce immune pathology, and a diagnostic platform should include a panel of nucleocapsid and spike proteins from phylogenetically distinct CoVs.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reverse genetics with a full-length infectious cDNA of the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirusProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013
- The Spike Protein of the Emerging Betacoronavirus EMC Uses a Novel Coronavirus Receptor for Entry, Can Be Activated by TMPRSS2, and Is Targeted by Neutralizing AntibodiesJournal of Virology, 2013
- Evidence Supporting a Zoonotic Origin of Human Coronavirus Strain NL63Journal of Virology, 2012
- Phase I Safety and Immunogenicity Evaluations of an Alphavirus Replicon HIV-1 Subtype CgagVaccine in Healthy HIV-1-Uninfected AdultsClinical and Vaccine Immunology, 2012
- SARS-CoV and emergent coronaviruses: viral determinants of interspecies transmissionCurrent Opinion in Virology, 2011
- Culturing the Unculturable: Human Coronavirus HKU1 Infects, Replicates, and Produces Progeny Virions in Human Ciliated Airway Epithelial Cell CulturesJournal of Virology, 2010
- Recombination, Reservoirs, and the Modular Spike: Mechanisms of Coronavirus Cross-Species TransmissionJournal of Virology, 2010
- Development of an Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay-Based Test with a Cocktail of Nucleocapsid and Spike Proteins for Detection of Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome-Associated Coronavirus-Specific AntibodyClinical and Vaccine Immunology, 2009
- Synthetic recombinant bat SARS-like coronavirus is infectious in cultured cells and in miceProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- Identification of a new human coronavirusNature Medicine, 2004