Multimeric ACE2-IgM fusions as broadly active antivirals that potently neutralize SARS-CoV-2 variants

November 14, 2022

Title

Multimeric ACE2-IgM fusions as broadly active antivirals that potently neutralize SARS-CoV-2 variants

Author

Hristo L. Svilenov, Romina Bester, Julia Sacherl, Ramona Absmeier, Carsten Peters, Ulrike Protzer, Carsten Brockmeyer & Johannes Buchner

Year

2022

Journal

Communications Biology

Abstract

Coronavirus infections are a world-wide threat to human health. A promising strategy to develop a broadly active antiviral is the use of fusion proteins consisting of an antibody IgG Fc region and a human ACE2 domain to which the viral spike proteins bind. Here we create antiviral fusion proteins based on IgM scaffolds. The hexameric ACE2-IgM-Fc fusions can be efficiently produced in mammalian cells and they neutralize the infectious virus with picomolar affinity thus surpassing monomeric ACE2-IgM-Fc by up to 96-fold in potency. In addition, the ACE2-IgM fusion shows increased neutralization efficiency for the highly infectious SARS-CoV-2 omicron variant in comparison to prototypic SARS-CoV-2. Taken together, these multimeric IgM fusions proteins are a powerful weapon to fight coronavirus infections.

Instrument

J-1500

Keywords

Coronavirus, infections, SARS-Cov-2,