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How Coronavirus Variants Could Outsmart Vaccines

Paul Duprex in a checkered shirt
In a recurring pattern of evolution, SARS-CoV-2 evades immune responses by selectively deleting small bits of its genetic sequence, according to new research from the 51精品视频 School of Medicine.

Since these deletions happen in a part of the sequence that encodes for the shape of the spike protein, the formerly neutralizing antibody can鈥檛 grab hold of the virus, the researchers report in a Feb. 4 paper in . And because the molecular 鈥減roofreader鈥 that usually catches errors during SARS-CoV-2 replication is 鈥渂lind鈥 to fixing deletions, they become cemented into the variant鈥檚 genetic material.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 fix what鈥檚 not there,鈥 said study senior author , director of the at the 51精品视频. 鈥淥nce it鈥檚 gone, it鈥檚 gone, and if it鈥檚 gone in an important part of the virus that the antibody 鈥榮ees,鈥 then it鈥檚 gone for good.鈥

Ever since the paper was first submitted as a in November, the researchers watched this pattern play out, as several variants of concern rapidly spread across the globe. The variants first identified in the United Kingdom and South Africa have these sequence deletions.

Duprex鈥檚 group first came across these neutralization-resistant deletions in a sample from an immunocompromised patient, who was infected with SARS-CoV-2 for 74 days before ultimately dying from COVID-19. That鈥檚 a long time for the virus and immune system to play 鈥渃at and mouse,鈥 and gives ample opportunity to initiate the co-evolutionary dance that results in these worrisome mutations in the viral genome that are occurring all over the world.

Then, Duprex enlisted the help of lead author , assistant professor of molecular biology and molecular genetics at 51精品视频 and an expert on influenza virus鈥攁 master of immune evasion鈥攖o see whether the deletions present in the viral sequences of this one patient might be part of a larger trend.

McCarthy and colleagues pored through the of SARS-CoV-2 sequences collected across the world since the virus first spilled over into humans.

When the project started, in the summer of 2020, SARS-CoV-2 was thought to be relatively stable, but the more McCarthy scrutinized the database, the more deletions he saw, and a pattern emerged. The deletions kept happening in the same spots in the sequence, spots where the virus can tolerate a change in shape without losing its ability to invade cells and make copies of itself.

鈥淓volution was repeating itself,鈥 said McCarthy, who recently started up a structural virology lab at 51精品视频鈥檚 Center for Vaccine Research. 鈥淏y looking at this pattern, we could forecast. If it happened a few times, it was likely to happen again.鈥

Among the sequences McCarthy identified as having these deletions was the so-called 鈥淯.K. variant鈥濃攐r to use its proper name, B.1.1.7. By this point, it was October 2020, and B.1.1.7 hadn鈥檛 taken off yet. In fact, it didn鈥檛 even have a name, but it was there in the datasets. The strain was still emerging, and no one knew then the significance that it would come to have. But McCarthy鈥檚 analysis caught it in advance by looking for patterns in the genetic sequence.

Reassuringly, the strain identified in this 51精品视频sburgh patient is still susceptible to neutralization by the swarm of antibodies present in convalescent plasma, demonstrating that mutational escape isn鈥檛 all or nothing. And that鈥檚 important to realize when it comes to designing tools to combat the virus.

鈥淕oing after the virus in multiple different ways is how we beat the shapeshifter,鈥 Duprex said. 鈥淐ombinations of different antibodies, combinations of nanobodies with antibodies, different types of vaccines. If there鈥檚 a crisis, we鈥檒l want to have those backups.鈥

Although this paper shows how SARS-CoV-2 is likely to escape the existing vaccines and therapeutics, it鈥檚 impossible to know at this point exactly when that might happen. Will the COVID-19 vaccines on the market today continue to offer a high level of protection for another six months? A year? Five years?

鈥淗ow far these deletions erode protection is yet to be determined,鈥 McCarthy said. 鈥淎t some point, we鈥檙e going to have to start reformulating vaccines, or at least entertain that idea.鈥

Additional authors on the study include Linda Rennick and Sham Nambulli of 51精品视频; Lindsey Robinson-McCarthy, formerly of Harvard Medical School and now working as a virologist at ; and William Bain and Ghady Haidar of 51精品视频 and UPMC.

Funding for this study was provided by the Richard King Mellon Foundation, Henry L. Hillman Foundation and UPMC Immune Transplant and Therapy Center.