Q1 · MEDICINE
Article
Author: Ricketts, James ; Rogers, Thomas F. ; Parren, Mara ; Nemazee, David ; He, Wan-ting ; Yong, Peter ; Beutler, Nathan ; Peng, Linghang ; Smith, Davey M. ; Andrabi, Raiees ; Zhou, Panpan ; Shaabani, Namir ; Garcia, Elijah ; Song, Ge ; Rawlings, Stephen A. ; Yuan, Meng ; Zhu, Xueyong ; Callaghan, Sean ; Huang, Deli ; Wilson, Ian A. ; Burton, Dennis R. ; Anzanello, Fabio ; Teijaro, John R.
Broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) to coronaviruses (CoVs) are valuable in their own right as prophylactic and therapeutic reagents to treat diverse CoVs and as templates for rational pan-CoV vaccine design. We recently described a bnAb, CC40.8, from a CoV disease 2019 (COVID-19) convalescent donor that exhibits broad reactivity with human β-CoVs. Here, we showed that CC40.8 targets the conserved S2 stem helix region of the CoV spike fusion machinery. We determined a crystal structure of CC40.8 Fab with a SARS-CoV-2 S2 stem peptide at 1.6-Å resolution and found that the peptide adopted a mainly helical structure. Conserved residues in β-CoVs interacted with CC40.8 antibody, thereby providing a molecular basis for its broad reactivity. CC40.8 exhibited in vivo protective efficacy against SARS-CoV-2 challenge in two animal models. In both models, CC40.8-treated animals exhibited less weight loss and reduced lung viral titers compared to controls. Furthermore, we noted that CC40.8-like bnAbs are relatively rare in human COVID-19 infection, and therefore, their elicitation may require rational structure-based vaccine design strategies. Overall, our study describes a target on β-CoV spike proteins for protective antibodies that may facilitate the development of pan–β-CoV vaccines.