Q2 · MEDICINE
Article
Author: Zou, Yuefeng ; Wan, Liping ; Gao, Wei ; Yan, Yao ; Tang, Yongzhou ; Huang, Xi ; Song, Xuedong ; Yuan, Zhijun ; Luo, Yi ; Xu, Yifeng ; Fu, Weihui ; Jiang, Wenchao ; Chen, Cheng ; Tan, Tiong Kit ; Gilbert-Jaramillo, Javier ; Chen, Liandi ; Knight, Michael ; Wu, Fan ; Liu, Xiaolin ; Pang, Tuling ; James, William ; Lee, Suki M. Y. ; Townsend, Alain ; Miao, Xiaoniu ; Xu, Yingda ; Wang, Chao ; Tsun, Andy ; Sun, Joanne ; Rijal, Pramila
In the absence of a proven effective vaccine preventing infection by SARS-CoV-2, or a proven drug to treat COVID-19, the positive results of passive immune therapy using convalescent serum provide a strong lead. We have developed a new class of tetravalent, biparatopic therapy, 89C8-ACE2. It combines the specificity of a monoclonal antibody (89C8) that recognizes the relatively conserved N-terminal domain of the viral Spike (S) glycoprotein, and the ectodomain of ACE2, which binds to the receptor-binding domain of S. This molecule shows exceptional performance in vitro, inhibiting the interaction of recombinant S1 to ACE2 and transduction of ACE2-overexpressing cells by S-pseudotyped lentivirus with IC50s substantially below 100 pM, and with potency approximately 100-fold greater than ACE2-Fc itself. Moreover, 89C8-ACE2 was able to neutralize authentic viral infection in a standard 96-h co-incubation assay at low nanomolar concentrations, making this class of molecule a promising lead for therapeutic applications.