Boost and Increased Antibody Breadth Following a Second Dose of PARVAX for SARS-CoV-2 in Mice and Nonhuman Primates

Vaccines (Basel). 2024 Aug 2;12(8):882. doi: 10.3390/vaccines12080882.

Abstract

PARVAX is a genetic vaccine platform based on an adeno-associated vector that has demonstrated to elicit potent, durable, and protective immunity in nonhuman primates (NHPs) after a single dose. Here, we assessed vaccine immunogenicity following a PARVAX prime-boost regimen against SARS-CoV-2. In mice, a low-dose prime followed by a higher-dose boost elicited potent neutralizing antibody responses and distinct cross-reactivity profiles, depending on the antigen used in the booster vaccine. However, the potent neutralizing anti-vector antibody responses developed in mice limited the dose that could be administered as a prime. We further explored the re-administration efficacy in NHPs primed with a SARS-CoV-2 Delta vaccine and boosted with an Omicron BA.1 vaccine at week 15, after the primary response peak antibody levels were reached. The boost elicited an increase in antibodies against several Omicron variants, but no increase was detected in the antibody titers for other variants. The anti-vector responses were low and showed some increased subsequent boosts but generally declined over time. The potent prime vaccination limited the detection of the boosting effect, and therefore, the effect of anti-vector immunity was not fully elucidated. These data show that PARVAX can be effectively re-administered and induce a novel antigenic response.

Keywords: PARVAX platform; SARS-CoV-2; anti-vector response; antibody breadth; boost; genetic vaccine; re-administration.

Grants and funding

The funding to this project was provided by a sponsored research agreement from Albamunity (LHV), donations from Giving/Grousbeck (Emilia Fazzalari and Wyc Grousbeck), and multiple other donors (Nathalie, Alexandre and Charles de Gunzburg; David Vargo; Julia and Mark Casady and the One Step Forward Education Foundation; Katrine S. Bosley; Tamra Gould and Howard Amster II Donor Advised Fund of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland; The Tej Kohli Foundation; Michel Plantevin; Susan Stoddart and Chris Snook; Delori Family; Annette and Dan Nova; Jennifer and Jonathan Uhrig; Lyle Howland and Jack Manning; Michelle and Bob Atchinson; Elizabeth and Phill Gross; William and Carolyn Aliski) through the Mass Eye and Ear donor network. Nonhuman primate studies were also funded by the Programme Investissements d’Avenir (PIA), managed by the ANR under the reference ANR-11-INBS-0008.