Detection of Antibodies against Endemic and SARS-CoV-2 Coronaviruses with Short Peptide Epitopes

Vaccines (Basel). 2023 Aug 23;11(9):1403. doi: 10.3390/vaccines11091403.

Abstract

(1) Background: Coronavirus proteins are quite conserved amongst endemic strains (eCoV) and SARS-CoV-2. We aimed to evaluate whether peptide epitopes might serve as useful diagnostic biomarkers to stratify previous infections and COVID-19. (2) Methods: Peptide epitopes were identified at an amino acid resolution that applied a novel statistical approach to generate data sets of potential antibody binding peptides. (3) Results: Data sets from more than 120 COVID-19 or eCoV-infected patients, as well as vaccinated persons, have been used to generate data sets that have been used to search in silico for potential epitopes in proteins of SARS-CoV-2 and eCoV. Peptide epitopes were validated with >300 serum samples in synthetic peptide micro arrays and epitopes specific for different viruses, in addition to the identified cross reactive epitopes. (4) Conclusions: Most patients develop antibodies against non-structural proteins, which are useful general markers for recent infections. However, there are differences in the epitope patterns of COVID-19, and eCoV, and the S-protein vaccine, which can only be explained by a high degree of cross-reactivity between the viruses, a pre-existing immune response against some epitopes, and even an alternate processing of the vaccine proteins.

Keywords: COVID-19; array image processing; biomarkers; coronavirus; cross-reactivity; epitopes; peptide array; serology.

Grants and funding

This project was sponsored by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) under the funding number 01KI20201, Federal Ministry of Health Grant V-2020.6/1503_68403/2020-2021 and the Fraunhofer Internal Programs under Grant No. Anti-Corona 131-600034.