A Novel Nanobody Targeting Middle East Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus (MERS-CoV) Receptor-Binding Domain Has Potent Cross-Neutralizing Activity and Protective Efficacy against MERS-CoV

Guangyu Zhao(Institute of Microbiology), Lei He(Institute of Microbiology), Shihui Sun(Institute of Microbiology), Hongjie Qiu(Institute of Microbiology), Wanbo Tai(New York Blood Center), Jiawei Chen(New York Blood Center), Jiangfan Li(Institute of Microbiology), Yuehong Chen(Institute of Microbiology), Yan Guo(Institute of Microbiology), Yufei Wang(New York Blood Center), Jian Shang(University of Minnesota), Kaiyuan Ji(Shanxi Agricultural University), Ruiwen Fan(Shanxi Agricultural University), Enqi Du(Northwest A&F University), Shibo Jiang(New York Blood Center), Fang Li(University of Minnesota), Lanying Du(New York Blood Center), Yusen Zhou(Zhengzhou University)
Journal of Virology
June 28, 2018
Cited by 103Open Access
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Abstract

Therapeutic development is critical for preventing and treating continual MERS-CoV infections in humans and camels. Because of their small size, nanobodies (Nbs) have advantages as antiviral therapeutics (e.g., high expression yield and robustness for storage and transportation) and also potential limitations (e.g., low antigen-binding affinity and fast renal clearance). Here, we have developed novel Nbs that specifically target the receptor-binding domain (RBD) of MERS-CoV spike protein. They bind to a conserved site on MERS-CoV RBD with high affinity, blocking RBD's binding to MERS-CoV receptor. Through engineering a C-terminal human Fc tag, the in vivo half-life of the Nbs is significantly extended. Moreover, the Nbs can potently cross-neutralize the infections of diverse MERS-CoV strains isolated from humans and camels. The Fc-tagged Nb also completely protects humanized mice from lethal MERS-CoV challenge. Taken together, our study has discovered novel Nbs that hold promise as potent, cost-effective, and broad-spectrum anti-MERS-CoV therapeutic agents.


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