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Computationally designed mRNA-launched protein nanoparticle immunogens elicit protective antibody and T cell responses in mice

Grace G. Hendricks, Lilit Grigoryan, Mary Jane Navarro, Nicholas Catanzaro, Miranda L. Hubbard, John M. Powers, Melissa D. Mattocks, Catherine Treichel, Alexandra C. Walls, Jimin Lee, Daniel Ellis, Jing Yang Wang, Suna Cheng, Marcos C. Miranda, Adian S. Valdez, Cara W. Chao, Sidney Chan, Christine Men, Max Johnson, Samantha K. Zepeda, Sebastian Ols, Harold Hui, Shengyang Wu, Victor Lujan, Hiromi Muramatsu, Paulo J.C. Lin, Molly M. H. Sung, Ying K. Tam, Elizabeth M. Leaf, Norbert Pardi, Ralph S. Baric, Bali Pulendran, David Veesler, Alexandra Schäfer, Neil P. King

2025Science Translational Medicine14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines and computationally designed protein nanoparticle vaccines were both clinically derisked and licensed for the first time during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. These vaccine modalities have complementary immunological benefits that provide strong motivation for their combination. Here, we demonstrate proof of concept for genetic delivery of computationally designed protein nanoparticle immunogens. Using severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) as a model system, we genetically fused a stabilized variant of the Wuhan-Hu-1 spike protein receptor binding domain (RBD) to a protein nanoparticle we previously designed for optimal secretion from human cells. Upon secretion, the nanoparticle formed monodisperse and antigenically intact assemblies displaying 60 copies of the RBD in an immunogenic array. Compared with mRNA vaccines encoding membrane-anchored spike protein and a secreted RBD trimer, an mRNA vaccine encoding the RBD nanoparticle elicited 5- to 28-fold higher titers of neutralizing antibodies in mice. In addition, the "mRNA-launched" RBD nanoparticle vaccine induced higher frequencies of antigen-specific CD8 T cells than the same immunogen delivered as adjuvanted protein and protected mice from either Wuhan-Hu-1 or Omicron BA.5 challenge. These results establish that delivering computationally designed protein nanoparticle immunogens through mRNA can combine the benefits of both vaccine modalities. More broadly, our data highlight the utility of computational protein design in genetic vaccination strategies.

Topics & Concepts

ImmunogenMessenger RNAAntibodyVirologyVaccinationBiologyNeutralizing antibodyCoronavirusChemistrySecretionVaccine efficacyTranslation (biology)NanoparticleCD8GeneComputational biologyAntigenImmune systemMolecular biologyT cellCell biologySpike ProteinRNAImmunogenicityEpitopeTransfectionTiterDNA vaccinationAntigenicitySARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 ResearchImmunotherapy and Immune Responsesvaccines and immunoinformatics approaches
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