Schoefbaenker, M; Neddermeyer, R; Guenther, T; Mueller, MM; Romberg, ML; Classen, N; Hennies, MT; Hrincius, ER; Ludwig, S; Kuehn, JE; Lorentzen, EU
Research article (journal) | Peer reviewedVirus-specific antibodies are crucial for protective immunity against SARS-CoV-2. Assessing functional antibodies through conventional or pseudotyped virus neutralisation tests (pVNT) requires high biosafety levels. Alternatively, the virus-free surrogate virus neutralisation test (sVNT) quantifies antibodies interfering with spike binding to angiotensin-converting enzyme 2. We evaluated secreted nanoluciferase-tagged spike protein fragments as diagnostic antigens in the sVNT in a vaccination cohort. Initially, spike fragments were tested in a capture enzyme immunoassay (EIA), identifying the receptor binding domain (RBD) as the optimal diagnostic antigen. The sensitivity of the inhouse sVNT applying the nanoluciferase-labelled RBD equalled or surpassed that of a commercial sVNT (cPass, GenScript Diagnostics) and an in-house pVNT four weeks after the first vaccination (98% vs. 94% and 72%, respectively), reaching 100% in all assays four weeks after the second and third vaccinations. When testing serum reactivity with Omicron BA.1 spike, the sVNT and pVNT displayed superior discrimination between wild-type- and variant-specific serum reactivity compared to a capture EIA. This was most pronounced after the first and second vaccinations, with the third vaccination resulting in robust, cross-reactive BA.1 construct detection. In conclusion, utilising nanoluciferase-labelled antigens permits the quantification of SARS-CoV-2-specific inhibitory antibodies. Designed as flexible modular systems, the assays can be readily adjusted for monitoring vaccine efficacy.
Classen, Nica Ines | Professur für Pharmazeutische Biologie (Prof. Hensel) |
Hennies, Marc Tim | Institute of Molecular Virology |
Hrincius, Eike-Roman | Institute of Molecular Virology |
Kühn, Joachim | Institute of Molecular Virology |
Lorentzen, Eva | Institute of Molecular Virology |
Ludwig, Stephan | Institute of Molecular Virology |
Schöfbänker, Michael Eduard | Institute of Molecular Virology |