Increased neutralization and IgG epitope identification after MVA-MERS-S booster vaccination against Middle East respiratory syndrome

  • Anahita Fathi
  • Christine Dahlke
  • Verena Krähling
  • Alexandra Kupke
  • Nisreen M A Okba
  • Matthijs P Raadsen
  • Jasmin Heidepriem
  • Marcel A Müller
  • Grigori Paris
  • Susann Lassen-Haartje
  • Michael Klüver
  • Asisa Volz
  • Till Koch
  • My L Ly
  • Monika Friedrich
  • Robert Fux
  • Alina Tscherne
  • Georgia Kalodimou
  • Stefan Schmiedel
  • Victor M Corman
  • Thomas Hesterkamp
  • Christian Drosten
  • Felix F Loeffler
  • Bart L Haagmans
  • Gerd Sutter
  • Stephan Becker
  • Marylyn M Addo

Abstract

Vaccine development is essential for pandemic preparedness. We previously conducted a Phase 1 clinical trial of the vector vaccine candidate MVA-MERS-S against the Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV), expressing its full spike glycoprotein (MERS-CoV-S), as a homologous two-dose regimen (Days 0 and 28). Here, we evaluate the safety (primary objective) and immunogenicity (secondary and exploratory objectives: magnitude and characterization of vaccine-induced humoral responses) of a third vaccination with MVA-MERS-S in a subgroup of trial participants one year after primary immunization. MVA-MERS-S booster vaccination is safe and well-tolerated. Both binding and neutralizing anti-MERS-CoV antibody titers increase substantially in all participants and exceed maximum titers observed after primary immunization more than 10-fold. We identify four immunogenic IgG epitopes, located in the receptor-binding domain (RBD, n = 1) and the S2 subunit (n = 3) of MERS-CoV-S. The level of baseline anti-human coronavirus antibody titers does not impact the generation of anti-MERS-CoV antibody responses. Our data support the rationale of a booster vaccination with MVA-MERS-S and encourage further investigation in larger trials. Trial registration: Clinicaltrials.gov NCT03615911.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN2041-1723
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 19.07.2022

Comment Deanary

© 2022. The Author(s).

PubMed 35853863