BNT162b2 induces SARS-CoV-2-neutralising antibodies and T cells in humans

Uğur Şahin(Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz), Alexander Muik(BioNTech (Germany)), Isabel Vogler(BioNTech (Germany)), Evelyna Derhovanessian(BioNTech (Germany)), Lena M. Kranz(BioNTech (Germany)), Mathias Vormehr(BioNTech (Germany)), Jasmin Quandt(BioNTech (Germany)), Nicole Bidmon(BioNTech (Germany)), Alexander Ulges(BioNTech (Germany)), Alina Baum(Regeneron (United States)), Kristen E. Pascal(Regeneron (United States)), Daniel Maurus(BioNTech (Germany)), Sebastian Brachtendorf(BioNTech (Germany)), Verena Lörks(BioNTech (Germany)), Julian Sikorski(BioNTech (Germany)), Peter Koch(BioNTech (Germany)), Rolf Hilker(BioNTech (Germany)), Dirk Becker(BioNTech (Germany)), Ann-Kathrin Eller(BioNTech (Germany)), Jan Grützner(BioNTech (Germany)), Manuel Tonigold(BioNTech (Germany)), Carsten Boesler(BioNTech (Germany)), Corinna Rosenbaum(BioNTech (Germany)), Ludwig Heesen(BioNTech (Germany)), Marie-Cristine Kühnle(BioNTech (Germany)), Asaf Poran(BioNTech (United States)), Jesse Z. Dong(BioNTech (United States)), Ulrich Luxemburger(BioNTech (Germany)), Alexandra Kemmer-Brück(BioNTech (Germany)), David Langer(BioNTech (Germany)), Martin Bexon(Bexon Clinical Consulting (United States)), Stefanie Bolte(BioNTech (Germany)), Tania Palanche(BioNTech (Germany)), Armin Schultz(Clinical Research Services), Sybille Baumann(Clinical Research Services), Azita J. Mahiny(BioNTech (Germany)), Gábor Boros(BioNTech (Germany)), Jonas Reinholz(BioNTech (Germany)), Gábor Szabó(BioNTech (Germany)), Katalin Karikó(BioNTech (Germany)), Pei‐Yong Shi(The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston), Camila R. Fontes-Garfias(The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston), John L. Perez(Pfizer (United States)), Mark Cutler(Pfizer (United States)), David Cooper(Pfizer (United States)), Christos A. Kyratsous(Regeneron (United States)), Philip R. Dormitzer(Pfizer (United States)), Kathrin U. Jansen(Pfizer (United States)), Özlem Türeci(BioNTech (Germany))
medRxiv
December 11, 2020
Cited by 171Open Access
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Abstract

BNT162b2, a lipid nanoparticle (LNP) formulated nucleoside-modified messenger RNA (mRNA) encoding the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) spike protein (S) stabilized in the prefusion conformation, has demonstrated 95% efficacy to prevent coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Recently, we reported preliminary BNT162b2 safety and antibody response data from an ongoing placebo-controlled, observer-blinded phase 1/2 vaccine trial 1 . We present here antibody and T cell responses from a second, non-randomized open-label phase 1/2 trial in healthy adults, 19-55 years of age, after BNT162b2 prime/boost vaccination at 1 to 30 µg dose levels. BNT162b2 elicited strong antibody responses, with S-binding IgG concentrations above those in a COVID-19 human convalescent sample (HCS) panel. Day 29 (7 days post-boost) SARS-CoV-2 serum 50% neutralising geometric mean titers were 0.3-fold (1 µg) to 3.3-fold (30 µg) those of the HCS panel. The BNT162b2-elicited sera neutralised pseudoviruses with diverse SARS-CoV-2 S variants. Concurrently, in most participants, S-specific CD8 + and T helper type 1 (T H 1) CD4 + T cells had expanded, with a high fraction producing interferon-γ (IFNγ). Using peptide MHC multimers, the epitopes recognised by several BNT162b2-induced CD8 + T cells when presented on frequent MHC alleles were identified. CD8 + T cells were shown to be of the early-differentiated effector-memory phenotype, with single specificities reaching 0.01-3% of circulating CD8 + T cells. In summary, vaccination with BNT162b2 at well tolerated doses elicits a combined adaptive humoral and cellular immune response, which together may contribute to protection against COVID-19.


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