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Drug development of an affinity enhanced, broadly neutralizing heavy chain only antibody that restricts SARS-CoV-2 in hamsters
Bert Schepens; Loes van Schie; Wim Nerinckx; Kenny Roose; Wander Van Breedam; Daria Fijalkowska; Simon Devos; Wannes Weyts; Sieglinde De Cae; Sandrine Vanmarcke; Chiara Lonigro; Hannah Eeckhaut; Dries Van Herpe; Jimmy Borloo; Ana Filipa Oliveira; Joao Portela Catani; Sarah Creytens; Dorien De Vlieger; Gitte Michielsen; Jackeline Cecilia Zavala Marchan; George D. Moschonas; Iebe Rossey; Koen Sedeyn; Annelies Van Hecke; Xin Zhang; Lana Langendries; Sofie Jacobs; Sebastiaan ter Horst; Laura Seldeslachts; Laurens Liesenborghs; Robbert Boudewijns; Hendrik Jan Tibaut; Kai Dallmeier; Greetje Vande Velde; Birgit Weynand; Julius Beer; Daniel Schnepf; Annette Ohnemus; Isabel Remory; Caroline Shi-Yan Foo; Rana Abdelnabi; Piet Maes; Suzanne J.F. Kaptein; Joana Rochapereira; Dirk Jochmans; Leen Delang; Frank Peelman; Peter Staeheli; Martin Schwemmle; Nick Devoogdt; Dominique Tersago; Massimiliano Germano; James Heads; Alistair Henry; Andy Popplewell; Mark Ellis; Kevin Brady; Allison Turner; Bruno Dombrecht; Catelijne Stortelers; Johan Neyts; Nico Callewaert; Xavier Saelens.
Affiliation
  • Bert Schepens; Ghent University and VIB
  • Loes van Schie; Ghent University and VIB
  • Wim Nerinckx; Ghent University and VIB
  • Kenny Roose; Ghent University and VIB
  • Wander Van Breedam; Ghent University and VIB
  • Daria Fijalkowska; Ghent University and VIB
  • Simon Devos; VIB
  • Wannes Weyts; Ghent University and VIB
  • Sieglinde De Cae; Ghent University and VIB
  • Sandrine Vanmarcke; Ghent University and VIB
  • Chiara Lonigro; Ghent University and VIB
  • Hannah Eeckhaut; VIB-UGent
  • Dries Van Herpe; Ghent University and VIB
  • Jimmy Borloo; VIB
  • Ana Filipa Oliveira; VIB
  • Joao Portela Catani; Ghent University and VIB
  • Sarah Creytens; Ghent University and VIB
  • Dorien De Vlieger; Ghent University and VIB
  • Gitte Michielsen; Ghent University and VIB
  • Jackeline Cecilia Zavala Marchan; Ghent University and VIB
  • George D. Moschonas; Ghent University and VIB
  • Iebe Rossey; Ghent University and VIB
  • Koen Sedeyn; Ghent University and VIB
  • Annelies Van Hecke; Ghent University and VIB
  • Xin Zhang; KULeuven
  • Lana Langendries; KULeuven
  • Sofie Jacobs; KULeuven
  • Sebastiaan ter Horst; KULeuven
  • Laura Seldeslachts; KULeuven
  • Laurens Liesenborghs; KULeuven
  • Robbert Boudewijns; Rega Institute
  • Hendrik Jan Tibaut; KULeuven
  • Kai Dallmeier; KU Leuven Rega Institute
  • Greetje Vande Velde; KULeuven
  • Birgit Weynand; KULeuven
  • Julius Beer; Medical Center University Freiburg
  • Daniel Schnepf; Medical Center University Freiburg
  • Annette Ohnemus; Medical Center University Freiburg
  • Isabel Remory; Vrije Universiteit Brussel
  • Caroline Shi-Yan Foo; Katholieke Universiteit Leuven
  • Rana Abdelnabi; Rega Institute, KU Leuven
  • Piet Maes; KU Leuven, Rega Institute for Medical Research
  • Suzanne J.F. Kaptein; KULeuven
  • Joana Rochapereira; KULeuven
  • Dirk Jochmans; REGA Institute - KULeuven
  • Leen Delang; University of Leuven
  • Frank Peelman; Ghent University and VIB
  • Peter Staeheli; University Medical Center Freiburg
  • Martin Schwemmle; Medical Center University Freiburg
  • Nick Devoogdt; Vrije Universiteit Brussel
  • Dominique Tersago; ExeVir
  • Massimiliano Germano; UCB
  • James Heads; UCB
  • Alistair Henry; UCB
  • Andy Popplewell; UCB
  • Mark Ellis; UCB
  • Kevin Brady; UCB
  • Allison Turner; UCB
  • Bruno Dombrecht; VIB
  • Catelijne Stortelers; UCB
  • Johan Neyts; Rega Institute
  • Nico Callewaert; VIB and Ghent University
  • Xavier Saelens; Ghent University and VIB
Preprint in En | PREPRINT-BIORXIV | ID: ppbiorxiv-433449
ABSTRACT
We have identified camelid single-domain antibodies (VHHs) that cross-neutralize SARS-CoV-1 and -2, such as VHH72, which binds to a unique highly conserved epitope in the viral receptor-binding domain (RBD) that is difficult to access for human antibodies. Here, we establish a protein engineering path for how a stable, long-acting drug candidate can be generated out of such a VHH building block. When fused to human IgG1-Fc, the prototype VHH72 molecule prophylactically protects hamsters from SARS-CoV-2. In addition, we demonstrate that both systemic and intranasal application protects hACE-2-transgenic mice from SARS-CoV-2 induced lethal disease progression. To boost potency of the lead, we used structure-guided molecular modeling combined with rapid yeast-based Fc-fusion prototyping, resulting in the affinity-matured VHH72_S56A-Fc, with subnanomolar SARS-CoV-1 and -2 neutralizing potency. Upon humanization, VHH72_S56A was fused to a human IgG1 Fc with optimized manufacturing homogeneity and silenced effector functions for enhanced safety, and its stability as well as lack of off-target binding was extensively characterized. Therapeutic systemic administration of a low dose of VHH72_S56A-Fc antibodies strongly restricted replication of both original and D614G mutant variants of SARS-CoV-2 virus in hamsters, and minimized the development of lung damage. This work led to the selection of XVR011 for clinical development, a highly stable anti-COVID-19 biologic with excellent manufacturability. Additionally, we show that XVR011 is unaffected in its neutralizing capacity of currently rapidly spreading SARS-CoV-2 variants, and demonstrate its unique, wide scope of binding across the Sarbecovirus clades.
License
cc_by_nc_nd
Full text: 1 Collection: 09-preprints Database: PREPRINT-BIORXIV Type of study: Prognostic_studies / Rct Language: En Year: 2021 Document type: Preprint
Full text: 1 Collection: 09-preprints Database: PREPRINT-BIORXIV Type of study: Prognostic_studies / Rct Language: En Year: 2021 Document type: Preprint