Abstract
The emergence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants with potential resistance to existing drugs emphasizes the need for new therapeutic modalities with broad variant activity. Here we show that ensovibep, a trispecific DARPin (designed ankyrin repeat protein) clinical candidate, can engage the three units of the spike protein trimer of SARS-CoV-2 and inhibit ACE2 binding with high potency, as revealed by cryo-electron microscopy analysis. The cooperative binding together with the complementarity of the three DARPin modules enable ensovibep to inhibit frequent SARS-CoV-2 variants, including Omicron sublineages BA.1 and BA.2. In Roborovski dwarf hamsters infected with SARS-CoV-2, ensovibep reduced fatality similarly to a standard-of-care monoclonal antibody (mAb) cocktail. When used as a single agent in viral passaging experiments in vitro, ensovibep reduced the emergence of escape mutations in a similar fashion to the same mAb cocktail. These results support further clinical evaluation of ensovibep as a broad variant alternative to existing targeted therapies for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19).
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Main
Antiviral drugs against SARS-CoV-2 have relied primarily on small molecules and neutralizing mAbs. However, the efficacy of existing drugs is threatened by the potential emergence of escape variants via selective evolutionary pressure. To address this concern, antibody cocktails have been generated to provide broader protection against variants1,2,3. Recent data showed that two treatments of two antibodies administered as a cocktail were unlikely to be active against the Omicron BA.1 variant, leading the US Food and Drug Administration to revise their authorization for use. These concerns emphasize the need to develop alternative therapeutic modalities with broad variant activity.
DARPins are a novel class of therapeutics that are being developed in ophthalmology and oncology4,5. They are structurally different from antibodies and consist of a single chain of linked DARPin binding domains. Here we report the application of the DARPin platform6 to generate ensovibep, an anti-SARS-CoV-2 multispecific DARPin clinical candidate7,8,9. The smaller size of ensovibep (85 kDa), compared to ~150 kDa of a mAb, in conjunction with high thermal stability7, high production yields7 and demonstrated high protection against viral variants, makes this molecule an attractive alternative to other treatments.
The main mutations identified in SARS-CoV-2 localize to the spike protein, a metastable pre-fusion trimer on the viral membrane that mediates virus entry into the host cell. The spike protein comprises multiple functional subunits: S1, including the N-terminal domain (NTD) and the receptor-binding domain (RBD), responsible for interaction with the angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE2) host receptor10,11,12,13, and the S2 subunit, which is responsible for virus–host cell membrane fusion via irreversible conformational changes14,15,16,17. By the end of 2021, many viral lineages had been identified and designated as variants of interest (VOIs) or variants of concern (VOCs) based on their associated increased risk to public health—among them, the most recent lineage of Omicron, B.1.1.529 (refs. 18,19,20,21,22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30).
Many variants harbor mutations in the RBD domain of the spike protein, mainly in the ACE2-binding site (for example, K417T/N, N439K, L452R, E484K/Q and N501Y). These mutations have been linked to either increasing the affinity to the human ACE2 receptor (N439K and N501Y) and, therefore, transmissibility and/or facilitating immune escape (K417T/N, L452R and E484K/Q)18,19,23,24,25,31,32,33. In particular, the E484K substitution has been shown to play a key role in attenuating antibody potency, according to a study analyzing clinical-stage therapeutic antibodies20.
Using cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) analysis, we provide an explanation for ensovibep-mediated neutralization of SARS-CoV-2. Three DARPin domains can simultaneously target the receptor-binding ridge (RBR) on each RBD of the spike trimer, locking the spike in an open conformation and occluding the ACE2-binding site. Owing to the cooperative binding of this trispecific design, ensovibep confers high protection against a panel of relevant spike mutants as well as all frequent SARS-CoV-2 variants identified to date. We show, in a viral passaging experiment, that the protection provided by ensovibep against the development of viral escape mutants is equivalent to that of a clinically evaluated mAb cocktail1,34,35. We further demonstrate high in vivo efficacy in a therapeutic Roborovski dwarf hamster model where ensovibep protects against severe disease induced by SARS-CoV-2 (ref. 36).
Results
Structural basis for SARS-CoV-2 spike neutralization by ensovibep
Ensovibep comprises two human serum albumin (HSA)-binding DARPin domains for in vivo half-life extension9 and three RBD-binding DARPin domains, R1, R2 and R3, with picomolar affinity for their target (Fig. 1a and Supplementary Fig. 1). R1, R2 and R3 are sequence related and target a common epitope (Fig. 1b and Supplementary Figs. 2 and 3), but they are not fully identical in their paratopes (Supplementary Fig. 2). This allows the trispecific molecule to cover a potency loss if a monovalent binder is susceptible to a mutation. An advantage of this design is that a single ensovibep molecule can bind all three RBDs of the trimeric spike protein in a cooperative manner to improve potency (Supplementary Fig. 3).
To understand how ensovibep neutralizes SARS-CoV-2, we performed cryo-EM analysis on the S-ectodomain incubated with DARPin R2. After a 15-second incubation, three-dimensional (3D) classification revealed that 65% of the S-ectodomains were fully closed, 20% had two open RBDs and 15% had three open RBDs (Supplementary Figs. 4a and 5a and Supplementary Table 1). Density consistent with the DARPin molecule was present on the RBR on each open RBD. After a 60-second incubation, 66% of S-ectodomains had three DARPin-bound, open RBDs (Supplementary Fig. 5b), and 18% had one DARPin-bound RBD trapped in a partially closed conformation (Supplementary Figs. 5b and 6a,b). This demonstrates that DARPin R2 binding prevents closure of the RBD through a previously described ratcheting mechanism37. Subsequent 3D refinement produced a 4.2-Å-resolution map (Fig. 1c and Supplementary Fig. 4c–e), and, after focused refinement of the RBD region, the map quality was sufficient to assign the pose of DARPin R2, which binds with its N-terminus orientated toward the spike three-fold symmetry axis (Fig. 1c). The concave paratope covers the RBR, preventing ACE2 binding through steric hindrance (Fig. 1d). Guided by the cryo-EM data, molecular docking experiments were performed between the RBD and DARPin R2. The predicted interface area is ~700 Å2, and the key epitope residues F456, Y473, F486, N487 and Y489 form an interface of hydrophobic interactions and hydrogen bonds with the DARPin domain (Fig. 1e,f). Because R1, R2 and R3 share a similar paratope composition and architecture, we could conceptually model the three RBD binders of ensovibep bound to the fully open S-ectodomain (Fig. 1g). This demonstrated that the linkers would permit simultaneous binding of all three DARPin modules, allowing high avidity of ensovibep (Supplementary Fig. 1). These data suggest that ensovibep inhibits SARS-CoV-2 by blocking ACE2 binding, as observed for several SARS-CoV-2-neutralizing antibodies37,38.
Ensovibep is highly potent against SARS-CoV-2 variants
To assess neutralization of ensovibep against the wild-type SARS-CoV-2 and emerging variants, we used vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV)-based as well as lentivirus-based pseudoviruses displaying the SARS-CoV-2 wild-type or mutant spike protein. In addition, we tested authentic SARS-CoV-2 variants for the Wuhan reference and for lineages B.1.1.7, B.1.351 and P.1. In these settings, ensovibep is able to neutralize the wild-type strain with a half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) of ~1 ng ml−1 (Fig. 2a). This high neutralization efficacy is retained in most VOCs and VOIs, such as lineage B.1.1.7/Alpha, including also E484K or S494P, B.1.351/Beta, P.1/Gamma, B.1.617.2/Delta, AY.2/Delta Plus, C.37/Lambda, B.1.621/Mu and B.1.1.529/Omicron BA.1 and BA.2. (Fig. 2a,b, Supplementary Table 2 and Supplementary Fig. 7). The neutralization potencies of ensovibep remain within ten-fold difference from the reference virus, with IC50 values in the single-digit ng ml−1 range, even against variants that were demonstrated to be refractory to immunization, such as Beta, Gamma, Delta, Delta Plus and Omicron variants BA.1 and BA.2 (refs. 33,39,40,41). In contrast, many of the tested clinically relevant mAbs demonstrated a major loss in neutralization (Extended Data Fig. 1 and Supplementary Fig. 8).
Using pseudovirus neutralization assays, we also evaluated the influence of single mutations on the neutralization potency of ensovibep (Supplementary Table 3), the monovalent DARPin R2 and the reference mAbs REGN10933 and REGN10987. The panel included mutations present in VOCs and VOIs, frequent mutations or mutations located within the binding epitope of ensovibep. In contrast to the single mAbs, ensovibep protected well against most point mutations tested, with the only exception of substitutions at F486 and Y489, which affect all monovalent RBD binders incorporated in ensovibep (Fig. 2c). In line, structural analysis and modeling identify F486 and Y489 as core interacting residues for the three RBD binders7 (Fig. 1b,f). Consequently, the mutations F486V and Y489H destabilize the spike binding of the entire trispecific ensovibep molecule to the spike protein. However, F486, N487 and Y489 are also critical residues for the interaction between the RBD and ACE2, and their mutation reduces infectivity as demonstrated in pseudovirus experiments (Supplementary Fig. 9). The functional importance of F486 and Y489 is reflected by a low frequency of naturally occurring substitutions at these sites (Fig. 2c). A reduction of potency of ensovibep from one-digit to double-digit ng ml−1 IC50 values was also observed for mutation N234Q. This residue is located outside of the RBD-binding region of ensovibep. This minor effect could be related to the loss of the conserved glycosylation site at N234Q, favoring the kinetics of the down-conformation of the RBD domain, reducing binding of ensovibep and ACE2 to the RBD, both binding only the RBD up-conformation42.
Ensovibep retains potency against spike proteins carrying mutations at locations where the single DARPin domains partially lose activity, such as E484K and Q493K/R. We hypothesize that the cooperative binding in combination with the complementarity of the three RBD binders provide an enhanced resistance to spike mutations.
Live SARS-CoV-2 under therapeutic pressure of antivirals
SARS-CoV-2 escape mutants may arise under therapeutic pressure3,43. Using a viral passaging model, we compared the risk of mutational escape from therapeutic pressure for ensovibep to that of the monovalent R2 domain, mAbs REGN10933 and REGN10987 (individually or as a mixture) and mAb S309.
A French SARS-CoV-2 isolate (S:V367F/S:E990A) was passaged with increasing concentrations of antivirals (Fig. 3a,b). Escape variants were selected by passaging the supernatant of cultures showing virus-induced cytopathic effect (CPE) for the highest therapeutic concentration onto fresh cells while maintaining the therapeutic pressure (Supplementary Fig. 10). After the first incubation cycle of 4 days (passage 1), ensovibep, DARPin R2, REGN10933 and the antibody mixture conferred protection at the same concentration of 0.4 µg ml−1. S309 was less efficient, requiring a higher concentration (10 µg ml−1) for protection, and REGN10987 was not protective up to the highest tested concentration of 50 µg ml−1. Under continuous selective pressure through passage 2 to passage 4, DARPin R2 and the individual mAbs S309 and REGN10933 lost the capacity to protect cells, whereas ensovibep and the mAb cocktail protected cells throughout the four passages (Fig. 3a).
To identify putative escape mutations of the DARPins, RNA was deep sequenced from the highest antiviral concentration of each passage showing CPE (Fig. 3b). Mutations were found near the spike protein cleavage site (H655Y, N679_R685del, R682W and R682Q), which are likely related to adaptations to the experimental cell system and not escape mutations36,37. A potential escape mutation, F486L, was identified for the monovalent R2 but not for ensovibep up to round four. Still, F486 mutations were shown to influence the potency of ensovibep (Fig. 2c).
In vivo efficacy of ensovibep in a COVID-19 hamster model
We employed the Roborovski dwarf hamster, a species susceptible to severe COVID-19-like illness36, to test the in vivo efficacy of ensovibep and to compare it to the REGN10933 and REGN10987 antibody mixture. Moreover, evaluation of the virological and histopathological outcome of infection enabled comparison across a variety of relevant parameters.
We first aimed to determine in vivo protection conferred by ensovibep against a SARS-CoV-2 wild-type isolate. Initially, we determined both dose and time dependency of treatment efficacy based on clinical and virological parameters (see Methods for detailed descriptions). The course of disease in Roborovski dwarf hamsters is rapid, with animals developing severe disease within 48 hours of infection. We, thus, considered 24 hours post-infection (p.i.) as the latest possible intervention timepoint. Both dose and early administration of ensovibep were found to positively affect the outcome of infection, also evidenced by markedly reduced virus loads in the respiratory tract of treated animals (Supplementary Fig. 11).
We determined 10 mg kg−1 as optimal dose for ensovibep treatment and used it for comparison to REGN10933 and REGN10987 against the SARS-CoV-2 Alpha variant. We chose treatment timepoints at the time of infection to mimic clinical post-exposure prophylaxis and at 24 hours p.i. to mimic treatment at the onset of clinical symptoms (Fig. 4a). For post-exposure prophylaxis, we confirmed protection from disease for both treatments with notable reduction of virus loads, particularly in the lungs of treated animals compared to placebo-treated controls at all timepoints (Fig. 5a). No obvious differences were observed between the two agents; however, a slight trend toward lower viral load in the antibody cocktail group was observed at 5 days p.i. (Fig. 5a). By contrast, we observed differences between the groups treated 24 hours p.i. (Fig. 4b–d). Animals treated with ensovibep presented with improved condition at 2 days p.i., with 0/10 of the animals reaching a defined humane endpoint, whereas 5/12 animals in the mAb cocktail group and 5/12 animals in the placebo group had to be euthanized (Fig. 5b). Nevertheless, 3/10 hamsters in the ensovipeb group and an additional three hamsters in the placebo group reached defined endpoints at day 3 p.i., whereas no further animals in the mAb cocktail group developed severe illness (Fig. 4b). After the 24-hour p.i. treatment, no substantial differences in average body weights or temperatures were observed in any of the treatment groups (Fig. 4c,d and Supplementary Fig. 12). This is likely a result of the early termination of severely sick animals. However, examination of these parameters on day 2 p.i. revealed significantly higher body weights in both treatment groups compared to the placebo group and a trend toward higher body temperatures in the ensovibep group compared to the other groups (Fig. 4c,d). As body temperature decrease is a very sensitive parameter of disease in this species36, this, in particular, is reflective of the better condition of animals in the 24-hour p.i. ensovibep-treated group. Both treatments resulted in marked reduction of virus loads compared to the placebo group (Fig. 5a,b), with no appreciable difference between mAb and ensovibep treatment. This result was more pronounced at the level of replicating virus, indicating efficient neutralization of cell-free virus in both treatment groups (Fig. 5b). Although the histological outcome of infection was similar between both treatment groups (Fig. 6), semi-quantitative assessment of SARS-CoV-2-induced lesions revealed consistently higher scores for the mAb-treated group compared to ensovibep (Extended Data Fig. 2). Scores for inflammation in the mAb-treated group were, on average, exceeding the scores obtained for the placebo group. On a transcriptional level, gene sets representing pro-inflammatory cytokines or genes involved in cytokine-mediated signaling were overall reduced after treatment of hamsters with either ensovibep or the mAb cocktail (Supplementary Note and Extended Data Fig. 3). However, the translational significance of these findings to the clinic has not been completely defined.
We performed a pharmacokinetic analysis for both treatments and found similar exposures in non-infected hamsters after intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration. Ensovibep achieved a higher maximal serum concentration and a shorter systemic half-life compared to the mAb cocktail (Supplementary Fig. 13). To account for failed i.p. injections, we screened terminal serum samples and removed data of animals lacking proper exposure from all analyses (Supplementary Table 4).
Discussion
The structural analysis of ensovibep provides insights to the mode of action enabling low picomolar neutralizing activity observed against the currently most frequent SARS-CoV-2 mutations and variants. We measured the activity of ensovibep on a panel of single spike protein mutations that have been shown to be of concern because they may be associated with increased transmissibility or disease severity, or they affect neutralization of some monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies1,44,45. Of mutations tested, F486 and Y489 substitutions caused the greatest potency reduction when compared to wild-type or reference virus. Mutations at these positions were also noted in the viral passaging study. F486L was identified from sequencing of mutations allowing escape from inhibition by the monovalent DARPin R2, incorporated in ensovibep (Fig. 3b). F486 and Y489 are key binding residues for the interaction of ensovibep with the RBD. However, F486 and Y489 are also important for viral infection, being residues involved in binding of the spike complex to ACE2 and lower the infectivity of the virus21,25,46,47 (Supplementary Fig. 9).
The reduced neutralization potency observed for ensovibep and its single DARPin domains against viruses bearing the N234Q mutation outside the RBD might be explained by the effect of this mutation on the RBD conformational dynamics. An in silico simulation study showed that this conserved glycosylation site, together with N165, might be involved in the stabilization of the RBD up-conformation42. Because the RBD epitope for binding of ensovibep is exposed only in the up-conformation, a mutation in one of these glycosylation sites might affect binding equilibrium, as suggested in our neutralization assays. The N234Q mutation might affect all protein-binding scaffolds that are binding exclusively to the up-conformation of the RBD and reduces the affinity of the spike protein for the human ACE2 receptor, as demonstrated previously42.
Some mutations, not predicted to be key interaction residues for ensovibep (for example, E484K or Q493K), led to a reduction in potency for one or several of the RBD-binding monovalent DARPin domains, whereas the trispecific ensovibep molecule maintained full neutralization capacity. This demonstrates that the trispecific DARPin design of ensovibep, cooperatively binding with three distinct paratopes (Supplementary Fig. 2), results in high neutralizing potency, even if binding affinity for an individual DARPin domain is decreased (Fig. 2c and Supplementary Fig. 8). This cooperative binding of multiple paratopes is a hallmark of the trispecific nature of ensovibep, differentiating the molecule from mAb candidates by affording full neutralization of even the highly mutated SARS-CoV-2 variants, such as Omicron BA.1 and BA.2.
Ensobibep’s high level of protection against viral escape mutations was also demonstrated in a viral passaging experiment. The single mAbs and the monovalent DARPin R2 were overcome by escape mutants, whereas ensovibep maintained potency similar to a clinically validated mAb cocktail.
Translatability of the observed in vitro activity of ensovibep against SARS-CoV-2 was evaluated in a COVID-19 model using highly susceptible Roborovski dwarf hamsters. Using this in vivo model, we confirmed the therapeutic benefit of ensovibep, with outcomes similar to a clinically validated antibody cocktail. In a late intervention scenario, ensovibep treatment yielded prolonged survival of animals and reduced inflammation of the lungs when compared to mAb-treated and placebo-treated animals. In a pharmacokinetic profile, ensovibep showed a higher maximal serum uptake from the peritoneum compared to an antibody cocktail (Supplementary Fig. 13), which might be contributing to differentiated outcomes. Concomitantly, reduction of viral load was similar in the ensovibep-treated and mAb-treated groups, and both differed significantly from the control group, as determined by virus genomic RNA (gRNA), replicating virus and virus transcript levels. Potential mechanistic differences affecting virus particle clearance, such as phagocytosis, which is possibly related to Fc effector function, could not be assessed from the current study.
In conclusion, ensovibep has shown highly potent neutralization against the most frequent SARS-CoV-2 variants to date due to its cooperative and complementary binding to a highly conserved epitope region on the spike RBD. In vitro and in vivo single-agent efficacies closely match the performance of a clinically validated mAb cocktail. Ultimately, ensovibep demonstrates the potential to prevent severe disease and reduce viral load in a highly susceptible in vivo model under different treatment scenarios. The clinical translatability of these results is currently being investigated in the treatment of ambulatory patients with COVID-19. If successful, Escherichia coli-based manufacturing will allow rapid and large-scale production for global access to this new class of therapeutics to add to the COVID-19 armamentarium.
Methods
Generation of His-tagged monovalent RBD binders and ensovibep
DARPin constructs selected and cloned as described in the Supplementary Methods were transformed in E. coli BL21 cells (Merck), plated on LB agar (containing 1% glucose and 50 μg ml−1 of ampicillin) (Merck) and then incubated overnight at 37 °C. A single colony was picked into TB medium (containing 1% glucose and 50 μg ml−1 of ampicillin) and incubated overnight at 37 °C, shaking at 230 r.p.m. Fresh TB medium (containing 50 μg ml−1 of ampicillin) was inoculated with 1:20 of overnight culture and incubated at 37 °C at 230 r.p.m. At OD600 = 1.1, the culture was induced by the addition of IPTG (0.5 mM final concentration) and incubated further for 5 hours at 37 °C and 230 r.p.m. Harvest was done by centrifugation (10 minutes, 5,000g). After cell disruption by sonication, primary recovery was done by heat treatment for 30 minutes at 62.5 °C and subsequent centrifugation (15 minutes, 12,000g). Then, 20 mM imidazole and 1% Triton X-100 were added to the supernatant, and the 0.22-µm-filtered supernatant was further purified by immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) (HisTrap FF crude, Cytiva) using the N-terminal His-tag and including a wash step with 1% Triton X-100 and a step elution with 250 mM imidazole (Merck). In a subsequent step, the elution fraction of the IMAC step was applied on a size exclusion chromatography (Superdex 200, Cytiva), and fractions of interest were pooled and concentrated. Finally, the concentrated sample was filtered through a 0.22-µm Mustang E filter (Pall) for endotoxin removal and sterile filtration and quality controlled.
cryo-EM
Next, 4 μl of purified S-ectodomain (9 μM) was mixed with 1 μl of 50 μM DARPin R2 and incubated for 15 seconds at 21 °C. Then, 3 μl of sample was dispensed on Quantifoil R1.2/1.3 200 mesh grids that had been freshly glow-discharged for 30 seconds at 20 mA. Grids were blotted using blot force +2 for 5 seconds using Whatman No. 1 filter paper and immediately plunge-frozen into liquid ethane cooled by liquid nitrogen using a Vitrobot Mark IV plunger (Thermo Fisher Scientific) equilibrated to ~95% relative humidity at 4 °C. Movies were collected using Glacios Cryo-TEM (Thermo Fisher Scientific) operating at 200 keV and equipped with a Falcon 4 Direct Electron Detector (Thermo Fisher Scientific). For additional analysis of DARPin R2, 4 μl of purified S-ectodomain (18 μM) was mixed with 1 μl of 100 μM DARPin and incubated for 60 seconds at 21 °C. Grids were prepared as described above, and movies were collected using a Titan Krios Cryo-TEM (Thermo Fisher Scientific) operating at 300 keV and equipped with a Falcon 4 Direct Electron Detector. All cryo-EM data were acquired using EPU 2 software (Thermo Fisher Scientific) with a 30-degree stage tilt to account for preferred orientation of the samples. Movies were collected in electron counting mode at 92,000× (Glacios) or 75,000× (Titan Krios), corresponding to a pixel size of 1.1 Å per pixel or 1.045 Å per pixel over a defocus range of −1.25 μm to −2.5 μm.
Image processing
Movies were manually inspected and then imported into Relion (version 3.1.1)48. Drift and gain correction were performed with MotionCor2 (version 1.3.0)49, and GCTF (version 1.06)50 was used to estimate the contrast transfer function. Particles were picked using the Laplacian-of-Gaussian (LoG) algorithm, and then Fourier-binned (2 × 2) particles were extracted in a 160-pixel box. Extracted particles were subjected to two rounds of two-dimensional (2D) classification, ignoring CTFs until the first peak. Using the ‘molmap’ command in UCSF Chimera51, a SARS-CoV-2 spike structure (Protein Data Bank (PDB) ID: 6VSB)52 was used to generate a 50-Å-resolution starting model for 3D classification. Particles selected from 2D classification were subject to a single round of 3D classification (with C1 symmetry). Particles belonging to the best classes were re-extracted unbinned in a 320-pixel box, 3D auto-refined (with C1 or C3 symmetry) and post-processed. Iterative rounds of per-particle defocus estimation, 3D auto-refinement and post-processing were used to account for the 30-degree stage tilt used during data collection. When CTF refinement did not yield any further improvement in resolution, Relion’s Bayesian polishing procedure was performed on the particle stacks, with all movie frames included, followed by 3D auto-refinement and post-processing. Subsequently, additional rounds of per-particle defocus estimation, 3D auto-refinement and post-processing were performed on the polished particles until no further improvement in resolution or map quality was observed. The nominal resolution for each map was determined according to the ‘gold standard’ Fourier shell correlation (FSC) criterion (FSC = 0.143), and local resolution estimations were performed using Relion. Map sharpening was performed using DeepEMhancer (version 0.13)53 as implemented in COSMIC2 (ref. 54). To improve the quality of the DARPin R2 density in the fully open spike reconstruction, a focused 3D classification approach was employed. In brief, each particle contributing to the final C3-symmetry-imposed reconstruction was assigned three orientations corresponding to its symmetry-related views using the ‘relion_particle_symmetry_expand’ tool. A soft mask was placed over the map to isolate the DARPin R2-bound RBD, and the symmetry-expanded particles were subjected to masked 3D classification without alignment using a regularization parameter (‘T’ number) of 20. Particles corresponding to the 3D class with the best resolved DARPin density were re-extracted in a 200-pixel box and centered on the mask used for focused classification. In conjunction with this, the signal for the protein outside the masked was subtracted. The re-extracted particles were then 3D auto-refined (with C1 symmetry) using local angular searches (1.8 degrees) and sharpened using DeepEMhancer53. Three copies of the locally refined map were aligned to the globally refined map using the UCSF Chimera ‘fit in map’ tool and resampled using the ‘vop resample’ command. Finally, a composite map was generated using the ‘vop add’ command. An overview of the image processing workflows is shown in Supplementary Fig. 4a.
Molecular modeling of monovalent and multivalent DARPin molecules
Homology models of DARPin R1, R2 and R3 were generated with Rosetta version 3.11(2019.35.60890)55,56,57. The consensus-designed ankyrin repeat domain (PDB ID: 2XEE) was used as template. Mutations were introduced with RosettaRemodel with fixed backbone, and the structure was refined with RosettaRelax. Forty refined structures were clustered using RosettaCluster with 0.3-Å radius, and the lowest-energy model from the largest cluster served as the final model. The UCSF Chimera ‘fit in map’ tool was used to fit the DARPin R2 model into the locally refined EM map. This fitted model of DARPin R2, together with the RBD domain (PDB ID: 6M0J), was further refined with Rosetta. The structure was pre-relaxed for docking and served as input for local, high-resolution docking with RosettaDock with fixed backbone. Five hundred models were generated and clustered with 1-Å radius (RosettaCluster). The two largest clusters were inspected, and the lowest-energy model from the more conserved group (that is, with lower rigid body perturbation from the input structure) was taken further for additional all-atom refinement with RosettaRelax, with protocol optimized for interfaces (InterfaceRelax2019). Fifty models were generated, and the lowest-scoring model was selected. This model was used to describe the interactions between DARPin R2 and the RBD. The PDB file with the coordinates of the trimer of DARPin R2:RBD was used as an input structure for the conceptual modeling of ensovibep bound to the spike ectodomain as shown in Fig. 1g. The linkers were generated using Rosetta modeling tools. Figures were generated with UCSF Chimera (version 1.15.0)51, UCSF ChimeraX (version 1.2.5)58 and PyMOL (version 2.0, Schrödinger).
Generation of mAbs
All used mAbs were custom produced at evitria AG based on publicly available sequences. Production numbers: REGN10933; 902071.2 / LY-CoV555; 901968.1 / LY-CoV016; 902385.1 / REGN10987; 902709.1 / AZD8895; 905290.1 / AZD1061; 905290.2 / S309; 905290.3 / BRII-196; 905342.1 / BRII-198; 905342.2. All mAbs passed quality control (by SDS–PAGE, size exclusion chromatography and endotoxin measurement) before use in assays.
VSV–SARS-CoV-2 pseudotype mutation vector generation
Plasmid pCAGGS containing the Wuhan-hu-1 spike protein of SARS-CoV-2 (ref. 7) was used as a reference and as template for generation of single and multiple spike protein mutants. Forward and reverse complementary primers encoding the mutation were synthesized by Microsynth. High-fidelity Phusion polymerase (New England Biolabs) was used for all DNA amplification.
Mutations of the spike protein were generated via site-directed mutagenesis, with DNA fragments generated via polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (Phusion polymerase, New England Biolabs) with a generic forward primer upstream of the spike open reading frame (ORF) (pCAGGS-5; GGTTCGGCTTCTGGCGTGTGACC) and with a mutation-specific reverse primer or a generic reverse primer (rbglobpA-R; CCCATATGTCCTTCCGAGTG) downstream the ORF. Fragments were used as input for an assembly PCR. For multi-mutation spike proteins, a complementary pair of primers was designed. The full-length mutated spike ORF was inserted into the pCAGGS vector backbone. Sequence was verified by Microsynth.
VSV–SARS-CoV-2 pseudotype neutralization assay
The pseudotype viral system was based on the recombinant VSV*ΔG-Luc vector in which the glycoprotein gene (G) had been deleted and replaced with genes encoding green fluorescent protein and luciferase59. Pseudoviruses were generated as reported previously60,61. For the neutralization assay, an initial dilution of the compounds was followed by three-fold dilutions in quadruplicates in DMEM-2% (vol/vol) FCS supplemented with 20 μM HSA (CSL Behring). The mixture was mixed with an equal volume of DMEM-2% FCS containing 250 infectious units per well of SARS-CoV-2 pseudoviruses and incubated for 90 minutes at 37 °C. The mix was inoculated onto Vero E6 cells (supplied by the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC), CRL-1586) in a clear-bottom, white-walled 96-well plate during 90 minutes at 37 °C. The inoculum was removed and fresh medium added, and cells were further incubated at 37 °C for 16 hours. Cell were lysed according to the ONE-Glo luciferase assay system (Promega), and light emission was recorded using a Berthold TriStar LB941 luminometer. The raw data (relative luminescence unit (RLU) values) were exported to GraphPad Prism version 8.4.3, and the % neutralization values were normalized to the untreated PsV signal. IC50 values with 95% confidence intervals were estimated by the model of non-linear regression fit with settings for log (inhibitor) versus normalized response curves. Data points are plotted by the mean ± s.e.m. of quadruplicate data.
SARS-CoV-2 lentivirus-based pseudovirus neutralization assay
The neutralizing activity of the compounds was measured using lentiviral particles pseudotyped with spike proteins of SARS-COV-2 variants, as previously described62. In brief, pseudoviruses bearing the spike proteins and carrying a firefly luciferase63 reporter gene were produced in 293T cells (ATCC, CRL-3216) by co-transfection of pCMVΔR8.2, pHR′CMVLuc and pCDNA3.1-spike variants. Plasmids encoding human codon-optimized spike genes with the desired mutations were purchased (GenScript). Supernatants containing pseudoviruses were collected 48 hours after transfection, filtered and stored at −80 °C. Pseudovirus titers were measured by infecting 293T-ACE2.TMPRSS2s cells62 for 48 hours before measuring luciferase activity (luciferase assay reagent, Promega). For neutralization assays, pseudoviruses with titers of approximately 106 RLU ml−1 were incubated with serially diluted compounds for 2 hours at 37 °C before adding the pseudovirus and antibody mixtures (100 μl) onto 96-well plates pre-seeded 1 day earlier with 3.0 × 104 293T-ACE2.TMPRSS2s cells per well. Pseudovirus infection was scored 48 hours later by measuring luciferase activity (SpectraMax Plate Reader, Molecular Devices). The concentration causing a 50% reduction of RLU compared to control (ID50) was reported as the neutralizing antibody titer. Titers were calculated using a non-linear regression curve fit (GraphPad Prism). The mean titer from at least two independent experiments with intra-assay duplicates was reported as the final titer. This work was performed independently by investigators at the US Food and Drug Administration, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, as part of the Therapeutics Research Team for the US government COVID-19 response efforts.
SARS-CoV-2 lentivirus-based pseudovirus neutralization assay (setup 2)
Some neutralizing activity was measured with a second lentiviral pseudotype assay setup. Data from this setup represent single runs. This work was performed independently by investigators at Monogram Biosciences for the US government COVID-19 response efforts. The assay setup is described in detail by Huang et al.64.
Cells and pathogenic virus
Vero E6 cells (kindly provided by Volker Thiel, University of Bern) were passaged in MEM containing 10% FCS and supplements (2 mM L-glutamine, 1% non-essential amino acids, 100 U ml−1 of penicillin, 100 μg ml−1 of streptomycin and 0.06% sodium bicarbonate, all from Bioswisstec) at 37 °C, >85% humidity and 5% CO2. Vero E6/TMPRSS2 cells65,66 obtained from the Centre For AIDS Reagents (National Institute for Biological Standards and Control) were passaged in DMEM containing 10% FCS and supplements at 37 °C, >85% humidity and 5% CO2.
SARS-CoV-2 (2019-nCoV/IDF0372/2020) was propagated in Vero E6 cells in MEM containing 2% FCS and supplements (2%-FCS-MEM) at 37 °C, >85% humidity and 5% CO2. SARS-CoV-2 variants (B.1.1.7, B.1.351 and P.1) were provided by the University Hospital of Geneva, Laboratory of Virology33, and propagated in Vero E6/TMPRSS2 cells in DMEM containing 2% FCS and supplements (2%-FCS-DMEM) at 37 °C, >85% humidity and 5% CO2. Viral titer was determined by standard plaque assay, by incubating ten-fold serial dilutions of the virus for 1 hour at 37 °C on a confluent 24-well plate with Vero E6 cells. Then, inoculum was removed, and 1 ml of overlay medium (20 ml DMEM, 5 ml FCS, 100 U ml−1 of penicillin, 100 μg ml−1 of streptomycin and 25 ml of Avicel rc581) was added. After 3 days of incubation at 37 °C, the overlay was removed, and the plates were stained with crystal violet.
Viral passaging experiment with authentic SARS-CoV-2
Virus escape studies were adapted from Baum et al.1. In brief, 1:5 serial dilutions of the compounds from 100 μg ml−1 to 0.032 μg ml−1 were prepared in MEM 2% FCS, supplements and 10 μM HSA (CSL Behring, 2%-FCS-MEM+HSA). Next, 500 µl of virus suspension containing 1.5 × 106 plaque-forming units (PFU) of SARS-CoV-2 in 2%-FCS-MEM+HSA was mixed with 500 μl of serially diluted DARPin molecules or mAbs and subsequently incubated for 1 hour at 37 °C. The mixtures were then transferred to confluent Vero E6 cells in 12-well plates and incubated for 4 days at 37 °C, >85% humidity and 5% CO2. Each culture well was assessed for CPE by microscopy. The supernatant was removed from wells with the highest DARPin or antibody concentrations showing substantial CPE (≥20%) and used for total RNA extraction and further passaging. For the next passage, the remaining 900 μl of supernatant was diluted in 4 ml in 2%-FCS-MEM+HSA, and 500 μl of this dilution was mixed with serial dilutions of the compounds and transferred to 12-well plates with fresh Vero E6 cells as described above. Cell culture wells were assessed for CPE again after 4 days, and the supernatant of wells with highest DARPin or antibody concentrations with evident viral replication (CPE) were harvested and used for additional passages.
Deep sequencing of viral passages
RNA of the cell culture supernatant was extracted using the RNeasy Universal Plus Kit (Qiagen), according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Next, 10.5 µl of the extract was reverse transcribed using SuperScript VILO (Thermo Fisher Scientific), following the manufacturer’s instructions. Barcoded libraries were prepared on the Ion Chef Instrument (Thermo Fisher Scientific) using the Ion AmpliSeq SARS-CoV-2 Research Panel (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Then, 8–16 barcoded samples were pooled and loaded on one Ion 530 chip using the Ion Chef Instrument and sequenced on the Ion S5 System with 550 flows. The resulting BAM files were converted to FASTQ format using SAMtools 1.10 (ref. 67) and subjected to adapter and quality trimming using Trimmomatic 0.39 (ref. 68) (options: ILLUMINACLIP:adapters.fasta:2:30.10, LEADING: 3, TRAILING: 3, SIDINGWINDOW: 4:15, MINLEN: 36). Reads were aligned to the SARS-CoV-2 reference genome (NC_045512.2) using bwa 0.7.17 (ref. 69), and variants were determined using LoFreq version 2.1.5 (ref. 70). Variants were filtered for a minimal depth of 400× and a minimal allele frequency of 3% using bcftools 1.10 (ref. 67). Functional annotation of the variants was performed using SNPEff 5.0 (ref. 71). Variants were visualized in R 3.6.1 using ComplexHeatmap 2.2 (ref. 72).
Virus neutralization of authentic wild-type and variants of SARS-CoV-2
Virus neutralization was determined using 100 TCID50 SARS-CoV-2 variants from lineage B.1.1.7 and P.1 or the wild-type French isolate (with the following differences to the Wuhan wild-type: V367F and E990A) in a cell viability assay. DARPin molecules were serially diluted 1:4 from 40 nM to 2.4 pM (in triplicates) in 100 μl of cell culture medium (2%-FCS-DMEM) supplemented with 10 μM HSA in 96-well plates, mixed with 100 TCID50 SARS-CoV-2 in 100 μl of 2%-FCS-MEM with HSA and incubated for 1 hour at 37 °C. The mixtures were transferred onto confluent Vero E6/TMPRSS2 cells. The controls consisted of cells exposed to virus suspension only, to determine maximal CPE, and of cells incubated with medium only, to determine baseline cell viability. The plates were incubated for 3 days at 37 °C, >85% humidity and 5% CO2. Cell viability was determined by removing 100 μl of supernatant from all wells and adding 100 μl of CellTiter-Glo reagent (CellTiter-Glo Luminescent Cell Viability Assay, Promega). Luminescence was measured using a GloMax instrument (Promega).
Roborovski dwarf hamster model for the assessment of antiviral protection
Cells and viruses
For in vivo experiments, SARS-CoV-2 isolates BetaCoV/Germany/BavPat1/2020 and BetaCoV/Germany/ChVir21652/2020 (B.1.1.7) were grown on Vero E6 cells and whole-genome sequenced before infection experiments to confirm genetic integrity. All virus stocks were titrated on Vero E6 cells before infection.
Animals and infection
A total of 120 female (67) and male (53) Roborovski dwarf hamsters (Phodopus roborovskii) obtained via the German pet trade were used for infection experiments. Animals were housed in groups of 3–6 animals of the same sex in individually ventilated GR900 cages (Tecniplast) and provided with food and water ad libitum and bountiful enrichment (Carfil). Infection was performed by intranasal administration of 1 × 105 PFU of SARS-CoV-2 in 20 µl of cell culture medium under general anesthesia36. All animal procedures were performed in accordance with relevant institutional and legal regulations and approved by the responsible state authority: Landesamt für Gesundheit und Soziales, Berlin, Germany, permit number G 0086/20.
Treatment
DARPin molecules and mAbs were administered intraperitoneally in sterile PBS. The final drug concentration was adjusted based on the desired dose and respective animal weight to a 100-µl injection volume. All animals in this study were treated once at the indicated timepoint, 0 hours, 6 hours or 24 hours p.i.
Experimental groups
From a total of 120 Roborovski dwarf hamsters, 54 were used to determine dose and time dependency of treatment success. Six animals (four female and two male) per group were infected with 1 × 105 PFU of SARS-CoV-2 wild-type (BetaCoV/Germany/BavPat1/2020) and treated with 3 mg kg−1, 10 mg kg−1 or 20 mg kg−1 of ensovibep at the time of infection, with 1 mg kg−1 or 20 mg kg−1 6 hours p.i. or with 10 mg kg−1 24 hours p.i. A placebo (PBS) treatment group with six animals (four female and two male) was also included in each of three studies performed for this purpose. Results of these experiments are summarized in Supplementary Fig. 11.
To compare efficacy of ensovibep and mAb cocktail treatment, 60 animals were infected with 1 × 105 PFU of SARS-CoV-2 variant B.1.1.7 (BetaCoV/Germany/ChVir21652/2020). Subjects were divided into groups of 12 animals (six female and six male) and treated with 10 mg kg−1 of ensovibep, 10 mg kg−1 of Regeneron mAb cocktail or placebo (PBS) at the time of infection or with 10 mg kg−1 of ensovibep or 10 mg kg−1 of Regeneron mAb cocktail 24 hours p.i. An additional six (three female and three male) animals served as a non-infected control group. Results of this experiment are presented in Figs. 4–6.
In all in vivo infection experiments performed in this study, half of each respective group was scheduled for take-out at 3 days p.i.; the other half was to be terminated at 5 days p.i. In some of the experiments, several animals had to be terminated at timepoints other than these for humane reasons. Defined humane endpoints included body temperature <33 °C, body weight loss >15% together with signs of respiratory distress, body weight loss >20% or a combination of these factors. Animals were monitored at least twice a day to prevent any prolonged suffering.
Virological analysis
RNA was extracted from throat swabs and lung tissue using the innuPREP Virus DNA/RNA Kit (Analytic Jena). Viral RNA was quantified using a one-step RT–qPCR reaction with the NEB Luna Universal Probe One-Step RT–qPCR (New England Biolabs) and the 2019-nCoV RT–qPCR primers and probe (E_Sarbeco)73 on a StepOnePlus Real-Time PCR System (Thermo Fisher Scientific), as previously described36. To obtain virus titers, duplicate ten-fold serial dilutions of lung tissue homogenates were made and incubated on Vero E6 monolayers for 2 hours at 37 °C. Cells were washed and overlaid with semi-solid cell culture medium containing 1.5% microcrystalline cellulose (Avicel) and incubated for 48 hours at 37 °C. Plates were then fixed with 4% formalin and stained with 0.75% crystal violet for plaque counting.
Histology
For histopathology, the left lung lobe was carefully removed, immersion-fixed in formalin, pH 7.0, for 48 hours, embedded in paraffin and cut in 2-μm sections. Slides were stained with hematoxylin and eosin (H&E) after de-waxing in xylene and rehydration in decreasing ethanol concentrations. Lung sections were microscopically evaluated in a blinded fashion by a board-certified veterinary pathologist to assess the character, distribution and severity of pathologic lesions using lung-specific inflammation scoring parameters as previously described for other lung infection models. Three different scores were used that included the following parameters: (1) lung inflammation score including severity of (i) interstitial pneumonia, (ii) bronchiolitis, (iii) necrosis of bronchial and alveolar epithelial cells and (iv) hyperplasia of alveolar epithelial type II cells as well as (v) hyperplasia of bronchial epithelial cells; (2) immune cell infiltration score taking into account the presence of (i) neutrophils, (ii) macrophages and (iii) lymphocytes in the lungs as well as (iv) perivascular lymphocytic cuffing; and (3) edema score including (i) alveolar edema and (ii) perivascular edema. H&E-stained slides were analyzed, and images were taken using an Olympus BX41 microscope with a DP80 Microscope Digital Camera and cellSens Imaging Software, version 1.18 (Olympus). For the display of overviews of whole lung lobe sections, slides were automatically digitized using the Aperio CS2 slide scanner (Leica Biosystems Imaging), and image files were generated using Image Scope Software (Leica Biosystems Imaging). The percentages of lung tissues affected by inflammation were determined histologically by an experienced board-certified experimental veterinary pathologist (O.K.), as described previously74. Lung inflammation scores were determined as absent, (1) mild, (2) moderate or (3) severe and quantified as described previously74. Immune cell influx scores and edema scores were rated from absent to (1) mild, (2) moderate or (3) severe.
Reporting summary
Further information on research design is available in the Nature Research Reporting Summary linked to this article.
Data availability
The EM density maps for the SARS-CoV-2 spike ectodomain in complex with monovalent DARPin R2 have been deposited to the Electron Microscopy Data Bank under accession codes EMD-11953, EMD-14810, EMD-14811 and EMD-11954. The atomic coordinates of the SARS-CoV-2 spike ectodomain used to generate the starting model for cryo-EM 3D classification are available from the Protein Data Bank under accession code 6VSB. The atomic coordinates of the template used to generate DARPin R1, R2 and R3 are available from the Protein Data Bank under accession code 2XEE. The monovalent DARPin and multivalent DARPin sequences, as well as pseudo-atomic models derived from molecular docking experiments, are available here, to allow the use of the data for non-commercial purposes. All other data used in the study are included in the manuscript files.
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Acknowledgements
We thank the Centre for AIDS Reagents (National Institute for Biological Standards and Control) for providing VeroE6/TMPRSS2 cells. The authors thank G. Zimmer for the gift of the recombinant VSV (Institute of Virology and Immunology, CH-3147 Mittelhäusern, Switzerland, Vetsuisse Faculty, University of Bern, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland). The expression plasmid for the SARS-CoV-2 spike protein was kindly provided by G. Torriani and I. Eckerle (Department of Medicine, University of Geneva, Switzerland). We would like to thank S. van der Werf for the supply of 2019-nCoV/IDF0372/2020 (National Reference Centre for Respiratory Viruses hosted by Institut Pasteur (Paris, France)). Strain 2019-nCoV/IDF0372/2020 was generously provided by X. Lescure and Y. Yazdanpanah from the Bichat Hospital. We thank W. Lee, former board member of Molecular Partners, and the virology group at Gilead Sciences for their helpful input during the discovery phase of ensovibep. S.R. and J.M. were supported by the Swiss Federal Office for Civil Protection (grants 353008564/Stm, 353008218/Stm and 353008560/Stm). D.L.H. is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement (842333) and holds an EMBO non-stipendiary long-term fellowship (ALTF 1172-2018). Cryo-EM data processing was carried out on the Dutch national e-infrastructure with the support of the SURF Cooperative using grant EINF-398. Lentivirus pseudotype investigations were performed independently by investigators at the US Food and Drug Administration, Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, as part of Therapeutics Research Team for the US government COVID-19 response efforts. The work was supported by US government research funds. If not stated differently, all other work was funded by Molecular Partners.
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Conceptualized and designed experiments: S. Rothenberger, D.H., M.W., F.M., J.M., S. Ryter, H.M., N.L., A.B., C.I., V.C., A.C., A.S., S.F., D. Schiegg, C.Z., G.S., M.C., F.S., I.D., A.G., C.K., K.B., K.R., M.H., A.Z., K.D., C.W., P.A., F.K., M. Stumpp, B.B., O.E. and J.T. Performed laboratory experiments: S. Rothenberger, D.H., M.W., F.M., J.M., S. Ryter, H.M., N.L., A.B., C.I., A.C., T.H., A.N., T.L., A.S., D.V., M.P., D. Schiegg, S.M., Y.K., D. Schaible, I.S., G.S., M. Straumann, J.W., M.C., H.L., C.W., W.L., W.D., R.H., S.L., S.N., R.V., W.W., J.A., K.E., M.N., A.A., J.B., O.K., E.W., L.A. and J.T. Performed computational work: D.H., F.M., C.R., F.R., I.D., M.N., E.W., L.A. and J.T. Drafted the manuscript: S. Rothenberger, D.H., M.W., F.M., H.K.B., C.K., K.B., K.R., S.L., R.W., A.G., K.D., P.A., F.K., M. Stumpp, B.B., O.E. and J.T. Acquired funding: S.L., D. Steiner, P.A. and M. Stumpp. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
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Authors employed by Molecular Partners own performance share units and/or stock of the company. H.K.B. owns stock of the company. I.D. is an employee of Thermo Fisher Scientific. C.K., K.B. and K.R. are employees of Novartis. Ensovibep is patent protected by Molecular Partners (with Novartis owning the global rights); names of inventors: Patrick Amstutz, Valérie Perrine Calabro and Marcel Walser; patent number: WO 2021/224686 A1; published on 11 November 2021. Funding sources are provided in the Acknowledgements. The other authors declare no competing interests.
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Extended data
Extended Data Fig. 1 Neutralization of Omicron BA.1 SARS-CoV-2 Variant by Antivirals.
Titration curves (mean ± SEM) and IC50 values (mean ± CI at 95%) for VSV-pseudotype neutralization assays with wild-type and two different Omicron BA.1 variant spike proteins containing either an arginine or a lysine in position Q493. Ensovibep was tested together with a panel of clinically validated monoclonal antibodies. The table provides the numeric IC50 values as well as the fold change towards the wild-type values.
Extended Data Fig. 2 Scoring of Histopathologic Lesions.
Histopathologic lesions were scored semi-quantitatively and scores plotted as graphs for histologic signs of general inflammation and histologic parameters of bronchiolar, alveolar and vascular lesions at day 2/3 p.i (a) or day 5 p.i. (b). Data are represented as mean values +/- SEM. Number of animals analyzed per treatment group at days 2/3; day 5 p.i.: Ensovibep 0 h: n = 5; 5 / mAb cocktail 0 h: n = 4; 5 / Ensovibep 24 h: n = 5; 5 / mAb cocktail 24 h: n = 6; 6 / Placebo, infected: n = 8; 4 Placebo, non-infected: n = 3; 3. The rational for excluding animals is the identification of animals with low drug exposure, likely due to a failure of i.p. injections.
Extended Data Fig. 3 Transcriptome Analysis of Animals Treated 24 h p.i. in Comparison to Placebo Group.
Extended Data Fig. 3: a) SARS-CoV-2 relExp: Comparison of the relative expression of total canonical junction-spanning viral mRNA transcripts, compared to the total genomic transcripts, among dwarf hamsters infected with SARS-CoV-2 after 2/3 and 5 days, and receiving therapeutically 24 h p.i. ensovibep, mAb cocktail or a PBS solution. Values are shown in log10 scale for both time-points. Red symbols: animals taken out of the study at day 2 due to severe clinical symptoms. Orange symbols: animals taken out of the study at day 3 due to severe clinical symptoms. Data is represented by the median and values for individual animals. Number of animals analyzed per treatment group at days 2/3; day 5 p.i.: Ensovibep 24 h: n = 5; 5 / mAb cocktail 24 h: n = 6; 6 / Placebo, infected: n = 7; 4. The rational for excluding animals in the Ensovibep 24 h group is the identification of animals with low drug exposure, likely due to a failure of i.p. injections. In addition, one sample in the PBS group did not yield enough RNA and was excluded. Statistics: two-tailed Mann-Whitney Test. P-values: ns = P > 0.05; *a: 0.0159; **a: 0.0082; **b: 0.0095. b-d) Heatmaps of differently expressed genes in the lung of dwarf hamsters after infection with SARS-CoV-2 and treatment with ensovibep or a mAb cocktail. Genes related to cytokine-mediated signaling pathway (b), type I IFN signaling (c), cellular-response to IFNy and pro-inflammatory cytokines (d) were selected, as previously described by Winkler et al. (2020) (10.1038/s41590-020-0778-2). Columns represent samples and rows genes. Shown are z-scores of DESeq2-normalized data and color scale ranges from blue (10 % lower quantile) to red (10 % upper quantile) of the selected genes.
Supplementary information
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Supplementary Methods, Supplementary Notes, References for Supplementary Information, Supplementary Figs. 1–14, Supplementary Tables 1–6 and References for Supplementary Figures and Tables
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Rothenberger, S., Hurdiss, D.L., Walser, M. et al. The trispecific DARPin ensovibep inhibits diverse SARS-CoV-2 variants. Nat Biotechnol 40, 1845–1854 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-022-01382-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-022-01382-3
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