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Immunogenic Amino Acid Motifs and Linear Epitopes of COVID-19 mRNA Vaccines
Adam V Wisnewski; Carrie A Redlich; Kathy Kamath; Queenie-Ann Abad; Richrd F Smith; Louis Fazen; Romero Santiago; Jian Liu; Julian Campillo Luna; Brian Martinez; Elisabeth Baum-Jones; Rebecca Waitz; Winston A Haynes; John C Shon.
Affiliation
  • Adam V Wisnewski; Yale University School of Medicine
  • Carrie A Redlich; Yale University School of Medicine
  • Kathy Kamath; Serimmune
  • Queenie-Ann Abad; Yale University School of Medicine
  • Richrd F Smith; Yale University School of Medicine
  • Louis Fazen; Yale University School of Medicine
  • Romero Santiago; Yale University School of Medicine
  • Jian Liu; Yale University School of Medicine
  • Julian Campillo Luna; Yale University School of Medicine
  • Brian Martinez; Serimmune
  • Elisabeth Baum-Jones; Serimmune
  • Rebecca Waitz; Serimmune
  • Winston A Haynes; Serimmune
  • John C Shon; Serimmune
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-21257427
Journal article
A scientific journal published article is available and is probably based on this preprint. It has been identified through a machine matching algorithm, human confirmation is still pending.
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ABSTRACT
Reverse vaccinology is an evolving approach for improving vaccine effectiveness and minimizing adverse responses by limiting immunizations to critical epitopes. Towards this goal, we sought to identify immunogenic amino acid motifs and linear epitopes of the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein that elicit IgG in COVID-19 mRNA vaccine recipients. Paired pre/post vaccination samples from N=20 healthy adults, and post-vaccine samples from an additional N=13 individuals were used to immunoprecipitate IgG targets expressed by a bacterial display random peptide library, and preferentially recognized peptides were mapped to the spike primary sequence. The data identify several distinct amino acid motifs recognized by vaccine-induced IgG, a subset of those targeted by IgG from natural infection, which may mimic 3-dimensional conformation (mimotopes). Dominant linear epitopes were identified in the C-terminal domains of the S1 and S2 subunits (aa 558-569, 627-638, and 1148-1159) which have been previously associated with SARS-CoV-2 neutralization in vitro and demonstrate identity to bat coronavirus and SARS-CoV, but limited homology to non-pathogenic human coronavirus. The identified COVID-19 mRNA vaccine epitopes should be considered in the context of variants, immune escape and vaccine and therapy design moving forward.
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Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Experimental_studies / Rct Language: English Year: 2021 Document type: Preprint
Full text: Available Collection: Preprints Database: medRxiv Type of study: Experimental_studies / Rct Language: English Year: 2021 Document type: Preprint
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