Vaccine protection against the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in macaques

疫苗对猕猴预防SARS-CoV-2 Omicron变异株的保护作用

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作者:Abishek Chandrashekar,Jingyou Yu,Katherine McMahan,Catherine Jacob-Dolan,Jinyan Liu,Xuan He,David Hope,Tochi Anioke,Julia Barrett,Benjamin Chung,Nicole P Hachmann,Michelle Lifton,Jessica Miller,Olivia Powers,Michaela Sciacca,Daniel Sellers,Mazuba Siamatu,Nehalee Surve,Haley VanWyk,Huahua Wan,Cindy Wu,Laurent Pessaint,Daniel Valentin,Alex Van Ry,Jeanne Muench,Mona Boursiquot,Anthony Cook,Jason Velasco,Elyse Teow,Adrianus C M Boon,Mehul S Suthar,Neharika Jain,Amanda J Martinot,Mark G Lewis,Hanne Andersen,Dan H Barouch

Abstract

The rapid spread of the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron (B.1.1.529) variant, including in highly vaccinated populations, has raised important questions about the efficacy of current vaccines. In this study, we show that the mRNA-based BNT162b2 vaccine and the adenovirus-vector-based Ad26.COV2.S vaccine provide robust protection against high-dose challenge with the SARS-CoV-2 Omicron variant in cynomolgus macaques. We vaccinated 30 macaques with homologous and heterologous prime-boost regimens with BNT162b2 and Ad26.COV2.S. Following Omicron challenge, vaccinated macaques demonstrated rapid control of virus in bronchoalveolar lavage, and most vaccinated animals also controlled virus in nasal swabs. However, 4 vaccinated animals that had moderate Omicron-neutralizing antibody titers and undetectable Omicron CD8+ T cell responses failed to control virus in the upper respiratory tract. Moreover, virologic control correlated with both antibody and T cell responses. These data suggest that both humoral and cellular immune responses contribute to vaccine protection against a highly mutated SARS-CoV-2 variant.

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