Abstract
COVID-19 is a severe acute respiratory disease caused by SARS-CoV-2, a novel betacoronavirus discovered in December 2019 and closely related to the SARS coronavirus (CoV). Both viruses use the human ACE2 receptor for cell entry, recognizing it with the Receptor Binding Domain (RBD) of the S1 subunit of the viral spike (S) protein. The S2 domain mediates viral fusion with the host cell membrane. Experience with SARS and MERS coronaviruses has shown that potent monoclonal neutralizing antibodies against the RBD can inhibit the interaction with the virus cellular receptor (ACE2 for SARS) and block the virus cell entry. Assuming that a similar strategy would be successful against SARS-CoV-2, we used phage display to select from the human naïve universal antibody gene libraries HAL9/10 anti-SARS-CoV-2 spike antibodies capable of inhibiting interaction with ACE2. 309 unique fully human antibodies against S1 were identified. 17 showed more than 75% inhibition of spike binding to cells expressing ACE2 in the scFv-Fc format, assessed by flow cytometry and several antibodies showed even an 50% inhibition at a molar ratio of the antibody to spike protein or RBD of 1:1. All 17 scFv-Fc were able to bind the isolated RBD, four of them with sub-nanomolar EC50. Furthermore, these scFv-Fc neutralized active SARS-CoV-2 virus infection of VeroE6 cells. In a final step, the antibodies neutralizing best as scFv-Fc were converted into the IgG format. The antibody STE73-2E9 showed neutralization of active SARS-CoV-2 with an IC50 0.43 nM and is binding to the ACE2-RBD interface. Universal libraries from healthy human donors offer the advantage that antibodies can be generated quickly and independent from the availability of material from recovered patients in a pandemic situation.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors declare a conflict of interest. The authors F.B., D.M., N.L., S.S., P.A.H., R.B., M.R., K.T.S., K.D.R.P., S.Z.E., M.B., V.F., S.T., M.S. and M.H. submitted a patent application on blocking antibodies against SARS-CoV-2.
Footnotes
↵* shared first authors
↵# shared last authors
In the revised version we extended the analysis to IgGs and added additional assays. The binding of three inhibiting IgGs to different RBD mutants was now analyzed with three different approaches (ELISA, Surface Plasmon Resonance(Biacore) and protein arrays). The antibody computational models was improved integrating these results. The best neutralizing IgG (STE73-2E9) was additionally analyzed regarding the affinity, binding to other corona viruses spike proteins, but also for binding to recently emerged virus mutants and its SEC profile, both relevant for its potential therapeutic usefulness.