'AeroNabs' promise powerful, inhalable protection against COVID-19
Led by UCSF graduate student Michael Schoof, a team of researchers engineered a completely synthetic, production-ready molecule that straitjackets the crucial SARS-CoV-2 machinery that allows the virus to infect our cells. As reported in a new paper, now available on the preprint server bioRxiv, experiments using live virus show that the molecule is among the most potent SARS-CoV-2 antivirals yet discovered. In an aerosol formulation they tested, dubbed "AeroNabs" by the researchers, these molecules could be self-administered with a nasal spray or inhaler. Used once a day, AeroNabs could provide powerful, reliable protection against SARS-CoV-2 until a vaccine becomes available.
The research team is in active discussions with commercial partners to ramp up manufacturing and clinical testing of AeroNabs. If these tests are successful, the scientists aim to make AeroNabs widely available as an inexpensive, over-the-counter medication to prevent and treat COVID-19. "Far more effective than wearable forms of personal protective equipment, we think of AeroNabs as a molecular form of PPE that could serve as an important stopgap until vaccines provide a more permanent solution to COVID-19," said AeroNabs co-inventor Peter Walter, PhD, professor of biochemistry and biophysics at UCSF and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Investigator. For those who cannot access or don't respond to SARS-CoV-2 vaccines, Walter added, AeroNabs could be a more permanent line of defense against COVID-19. "We assembled an incredible group of talented biochemists, cell biologists, virologists and structural biologists to get the project from start to finish in only a few months," said Schoof, a member of the Walter lab and an AeroNabs co-inventor. Llama-Inspired Design Though engineered entirely in the lab, AeroNabs were inspired by nanobodies, antibody-like immune proteins that naturally occur in llamas, camels and related animals. Since their discovery in a Belgian lab in the late 1980s, the distinctive properties of nanobodies have intrigued scientists worldwide. "Though they function much like the antibodies found in the human immune system, nanobodies offer a number of unique advantages for effective therapeutics against SARS-CoV-2," explained co-inventor Aashish Manglik, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of pharmaceutical chemistry who frequently employs nanobodies as a tool in his research on the structure and function of proteins that send and receive signals across the cell's membrane. For example, nanobodies are an order of magnitude smaller than human antibodies, which makes them easier to manipulate and modify in the lab.
Their small size and relatively simple structure also makes them significantly more stable than the antibodies of other mammals. Plus, unlike human antibodies, nanobodies can be easily and inexpensively mass-produced: scientists insert the genes that contain the molecular blueprints to build nanobodies into E. coli or yeast, and transform these microbes into high-output nanobody factories.
The same method has been used safely for decades to mass-produce insulin. But as Manglik noted, "nanobodies were just the starting point for us. Though appealing on their own, we thought we could improve upon them through protein engineering. This eventually led to the development of AeroNabs." Spike Is the Key to Infection SARS-CoV-2 relies on its so-called spike proteins to infect cells.
These spikes stud the surface of the virus and impart a crown-like appearance when viewed through an electron microscope -- hence the name "coronavirus" for the viral family that includes SARS-CoV-2. Spikes, however, are more than a mere decoration -- they are the essential key that allows the virus to enter our cells. Like a retractable tool, spikes can switch from a closed, inactive state to an open, active state. When any of a virus particle's approximately 25 spikes become active, that spike's three "receptor-binding domains," or RBDs, become exposed and are primed to attach to ACE2 (pronounced "ace two"), a receptor found on human cells that line the lung and airway. Through a lock-and-key-like interaction between an ACE2 receptor and a spike RBD, the virus gains entry into the cell, where it then transforms its new host into a coronavirus manufacturer.
The researchers believed that if they could find nanobodies that impede spike-ACE2 interactions, they could prevent the virus from infecting cells. Nanobodies Disable Spikes and Prevent Infection To find effective candidates, the scientists parsed a recently developed library in Manglik's lab of over 2 billion synthetic nanobodies. After successive rounds of testing, during which they imposed increasingly stringent criteria to eliminate weak or ineffective candidates, the scientists ended up with 21 nanobodies that prevented a modified form of spike from interacting with ACE2. Further experiments, including the use of cryo-electron microscopy to visualize the nanobody-spike interface, showed that the most potent nanobodies blocked spike-ACE2 interactions by strongly attaching themselves directly to the spike RBDs.
These nanobodies function a bit like a sheath that covers the RBD "key" and prevents it from being inserted into an ACE2 "lock." With these findings in hand, the researchers still needed to demonstrate that these nanobodies could prevent the real virus from infecting cells. Veronica Rezelj, PhD, a virologist in the lab of Marco Vignuzzi, PhD, at Institut Pasteur in Paris, tested the three most promising nanobodies against live SARS-CoV-2, and found the nanobodies to be extraordinarily potent, preventing infection even at extremely low doses.
The most potent of these nanobodies, however, not only acts as a sheath over RBDs, but also like a molecular mousetrap, clamping down on spike in its closed, inactive state, which adds an additional layer of protection against the spike-ACE2 interactions that lead to infection. From Nanobodies to AeroNabs The scientists then engineered this double-action nanobody in a number of ways to make it into an even more potent antiviral. In one set of experiments, they mutated every one of the amino-acid building blocks of the nanobody that contacts spike to discover two specific changes that yielded a 500-fold increase in potency. In a separate set of experiments, they engineered a molecular chain that could link three nanobodies together. As noted, each spike protein has three RBDs, any of which can attach to ACE2 to grant the virus entry into the cell.
The linked triple nanobody devised by the researchers ensured that if one nanobody attaches itself to an RBD, the other two would attach to the remaining RBDs.
They found that this triple nanobody is 200,000 times more potent than a single nanobody alone. And when they drew on the results of both modifications, linking three of the powerful mutated nanobodies together, the results were "off the charts," said Walter. "It was so effective that it exceeded our ability to measure its potency." Would Be Easy to Administer as an Aerosol This ultrapotent three-part nanobody construct formed the foundation for AeroNabs. In a final set of experiments, the researchers put the three-part nanobodies through a series of stress tests, subjecting them to high temperatures, turning them into a shelf-stable powder, and making an aerosol. Each of these processes is highly damaging to most proteins, but the scientists confirmed that, thanks to the inherent stability of nanobodies, there was no loss of antiviral potency in the aerosolized form, suggesting that AeroNabs are a potent SARS-CoV-2 antiviral that could be practical to administer via a shelf-stable inhaler or nasal spray. "We're not alone in thinking that AeroNabs are a remarkable technology," said Manglik. "Our team is in ongoing discussions with potential commercial partners who are interested in manufacturing and distributing AeroNabs, and we hope to commence human trials soon. If AeroNabs prove as effective as we anticipate, they may help reshape the course of the pandemic worldwide." Authors: Additional authors include Bryan Faust, Reuben A. Saunders, Smriti Sangwan, Nick Hoppe, Morgane Boone, Christian Bache Billesbølle, Marcell Zimanyi, Ishan Deshpande, Jiahao Liang, Aditya A. Anand, Niv Dobzinski, Beth Shoshana Zha, Benjamin Barsi-Rhyne, Vladislav Belyy, Silke Nock and Yuwei Liu of UCSF; Camille R. Simoneau, Kristoffer Leon, Nevan J. Krogan, Danielle L. Swaney and Melanie Ott of the UCSF Quantitative Biosciences Institute (QBI) and the J. David Gladstone Institutes; Andrew W. Barile-Hill of Cytiva Life Sciences; Sayan Gupta and Corie Y. Ralston of Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory; Kris M White and Adolfo García-Sastre of the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai; and the QBI Coronavirus Research Group Structural Biology Consortium. Schoof, Faust, Saunders, Sangwan and Rezelj are co-first authors of the manuscript. Funding: This work was supported by the UCSF COVID-19 Response Fund, a grant from Allen & Company, and supporters of the UCSF Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research (PBBR), which was established with support from the Sandler Foundation. Other support included National Institutes of Health (NIH) grants DP5OD023048, S10OD020054, S10OD021741, 1R01GM126218; Laboratoire d'Excellence grant ANR-10-LABX-62-IBEID; the URGENCE COVID-19 Institut Pasteur fundraising campaign; the Office of Science and Office of Biological and Environmental Research of the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-AC02-05CH11231; a Helen Hay Whitney postdoctoral fellowship; the Alfred Benzon Foundation; a gift from the Roddenberry Foundation; the Howard Hughes Medical Institute; the Pew Charitable Trusts; the Esther A. & Joseph Klingenstein Fund; and the Searle Scholars Program. Disclosures: Schoof, Faust, Saunders, Hoppe, Walter and Manglik are inventors on a provisional patent describing the anti-Spike nanobodies described in the manuscript.
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