Author: Dejnirattisai, Wanwisa; Zhou, Daming; Supasa, Piyada; Liu, Chang; Mentzer, Alexander J.; Ginn, Helen M.; Zhao, Yuguang; Duyvesteyn, Helen M.E.; Tuekprakhon, Aekkachai; Nutalai, Rungtiwa; Wang, Beibei; Paesen, Guido C.; López-Camacho, César; Slon-Campos, Jose; Walter, Thomas S.; Skelly, Donal; Costa Clemens, Sue Ann; Naveca, Felipe Gomes; Nascimento, Valdinete; Nascimento, Fernanda; Fernandes da Costa, Cristiano; Resende, Paola C.; Pauvolid-Correa, Alex; Siqueira, Marilda M.; Dold, Christina; Levin, Robert; Dong, Tao; Pollard, Andrew J.; Knight, Julian C.; Crook, Derrick; Lambe, Teresa; Clutterbuck, Elizabeth; Bibi, Sagida; Flaxman, Amy; Bittaye, Mustapha; Belij-Rammerstorfer, Sandra; Gilbert, Sarah; Carroll, Miles W.; Klenerman, Paul; Barnes, Eleanor; Dunachie, Susanna J.; Paterson, Neil G.; Williams, Mark A.; Hall, David R.; Hulswit, Ruben J.G.; Bowden, Thomas A.; Fry, Elizabeth E.; Mongkolsapaya, Juthathip; Ren, Jingshan; Stuart, David I.; Screaton, Gavin R.
                    Title: Antibody evasion by the P.1 strain of SARS-CoV-2  Cord-id: xxm6o1l1  Document date: 2021_3_30
                    ID: xxm6o1l1
                    
                    Snippet: Terminating the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic relies upon pan-global vaccination. Current vaccines elicit neutralizing antibody responses to the virus spike derived from early isolates. However, new strains have emerged with multiple mutations: P.1 from Brazil, B.1.351 from South Africa and B.1.1.7 from the UK (12, 10 and 9 changes in the spike respectively). All have mutations in the ACE2 binding site with P.1 and B.1.351 having a virtually identical triplet: E484K, K417N/T and N501Y, which we show confe
                    
                    
                    
                     
                    
                    
                    
                    
                        
                            
                                Document: Terminating the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic relies upon pan-global vaccination. Current vaccines elicit neutralizing antibody responses to the virus spike derived from early isolates. However, new strains have emerged with multiple mutations: P.1 from Brazil, B.1.351 from South Africa and B.1.1.7 from the UK (12, 10 and 9 changes in the spike respectively). All have mutations in the ACE2 binding site with P.1 and B.1.351 having a virtually identical triplet: E484K, K417N/T and N501Y, which we show confer similar increased affinity for ACE2. We show that, surprisingly, P.1 is significantly less resistant to naturally acquired or vaccine induced antibody responses than B.1.351 suggesting that changes outside the RBD impact neutralisation. Monoclonal antibody 222 neutralises all three variants despite interacting with two of the ACE2 binding site mutations, we explain this through structural analysis and use the 222 light chain to largely restore neutralization potency to a major class of public antibodies.
 
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