,
,
,
used antigenic cartography, whereby multidimensional scaling is used to generate antigenic maps in which the positions of antigens and antiserum samples directly correspond to neutralising titres. This method allows for the quantification and visualisation of antigenic properties of different variants simultaneously.
We now inoculated hamsters with the currently dominant omicron BA.5 variant, which is genetically close to BA.2, differing in the spike amino acid sequence by only three substitutions and two deletions (appendix p 1). Neutralising titres were determined using all serum samples and variants grown previously, along with omicron BA.5 and the omicron BQ.1.1, BM.1.1.1, and XBB.1 variants, which emerged in late 2022 (appendix p 2). Omicron BA.5 antiserum samples neutralised the homologous virus, BA.2, and BQ.1.1 efficiently, whereas omicron BM.1.1.1 was poorly neutralised. None of the serum samples were able to substantially neutralise XBB.1.
,
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In addition, these newly emerging variants do not cluster close to each other, therefore a vaccine based on any of these variants might poorly cross-neutralise new, emerging variants, which could be equally antigenically distant. Continuous mapping of new variants and a greater understanding of the evolutionary trajectory of SARS-CoV-2 could indicate potential vaccine candidates.
This work was financially supported by the Health∼Holland grant LSHM19136 to BLH; cofunded by the PPP Allowance made available by the Health∼Holland, Top Sector Life Sciences & Health, to stimulate public-private partnerships, and the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant number 101003589 (RECoVER; to MPGK) and EU funding grant agreement number 874735(VEO). BLH, RAMF, DJS, and MPGK are supported by the NIH/NIAID Centers of Excellence for Influenza Research and Response under contract 75N93021C00014-Icahn School of Medicine at Mt Sinai. MER and AK contributed equally.
Supplementary Material
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Published: January 16, 2023
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