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A protein-based pneumococcal vaccine elicits broad immunity associated with multifunctional antibody responses in humans
Kaiyi Li, Jinglu Yang, Xiaobing Zhai, Jinbo Gou, Xiuwen Sui, Bochao Wei, Yuan Wang, Xiaoling Su, Xiaoyun Yang, Shiqin Jin, Xuan Zhou, Yuxuan Zhang, Tao Zhu, Junxiang Wang, Zhongfang Wang
Kaiyi Li, Jinglu Yang, Xiaobing Zhai, Jinbo Gou, Xiuwen Sui, Bochao Wei, Yuan Wang, Xiaoling Su, Xiaoyun Yang, Shiqin Jin, Xuan Zhou, Yuxuan Zhang, Tao Zhu, Junxiang Wang, Zhongfang Wang
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Research Article Immunology Public Health

A protein-based pneumococcal vaccine elicits broad immunity associated with multifunctional antibody responses in humans

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Abstract

Traditional polysaccharide vaccines are constrained by streptococcus pneumoniae diversity. We propose a protein-based pneumococcal vaccine (PBPV) — formulated with conserved surface proteins P3296, P5668, PRx1, and pneumolysin (Ply) — that could potentially offer superior immune breadth independent of capsular polysaccharide serotypes. Here, we evaluated the multifunctional antibody responses induced by PBPV, including immunogenicity, Ply neutralization, opsonophagocytic activity (OPA), and such nonopsonic functions as NK cell activation (ADNKA), antibody-dependent cellular phagocytosis, and neutrophil phagocytosis (ADNP) in a cohort of 50- to 69-year-olds. While PBPV showed shorter-lasting immune responses, including reduced Ply-neutralizing capacity, it provided broader cross-serotype protection than 23-valent pneumococcal polysaccharide vaccine. Correlation analysis identified distinct PspA-specific IgG subclass roles: P3296-IgG1 correlated with OPA, and IgG3 correlated with ADNKA/ADNP; P5668-IgG2 correlated with ADNKA/ADNP, and IgG3 correlated with OPA; and PRx1-IgG2 correlated with OPA, and IgG3 correlated with ADNKA. Critically, while no efficacy data have yet confirmed the protective effect of PBPV, its targeting of conserved proteins rather than capsular polysaccharides enables simplified manufacturing and expanded coverage, positioning it as a promising alternative to traditional multipolysaccharide vaccines.

Authors

Kaiyi Li, Jinglu Yang, Xiaobing Zhai, Jinbo Gou, Xiuwen Sui, Bochao Wei, Yuan Wang, Xiaoling Su, Xiaoyun Yang, Shiqin Jin, Xuan Zhou, Yuxuan Zhang, Tao Zhu, Junxiang Wang, Zhongfang Wang

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Figure 5

The dominant antibody subclass correlating OPA with different serotypes varies among different PspA proteins.

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The dominant antibody subclass correlating OPA with different serotypes ...
(A) Multiple correlation coefficient analysis was conducted between the OPA indices for 6 serotypes (6A, 38F, 14, 4, 17F, and 11A) and the composite antibody titers of 4 immunogens in 30 subjects at D30, D90, and D180. The heatmap presents the correlation coefficients and corresponding P values. (B–D) Spearman’s correlation analysis between the antibody subclasses of P3296, P5668, and PRx1 and the OPA indices for the 6 serotypes at D30. (E) The frequency of serotype-specific responses elicited by different antibody subclasses at D30, D90, and D180. Significance was measured using Spearman’s correlation analysis in A–D. All P values were adjusted for multiple testing using the BH method. *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001.

Copyright © 2026 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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