- He, Wan-ting;
- Musharrafieh, Rami;
- Song, Ge;
- Dueker, Katharina;
- Tse, Longping V;
- Martinez, David R;
- Schäfer, Alexandra;
- Callaghan, Sean;
- Yong, Peter;
- Beutler, Nathan;
- Torres, Jonathan L;
- Volk, Reid M;
- Zhou, Panpan;
- Yuan, Meng;
- Liu, Hejun;
- Anzanello, Fabio;
- Capozzola, Tazio;
- Parren, Mara;
- Garcia, Elijah;
- Rawlings, Stephen A;
- Smith, Davey M;
- Wilson, Ian A;
- Safonova, Yana;
- Ward, Andrew B;
- Rogers, Thomas F;
- Baric, Ralph S;
- Gralinski, Lisa E;
- Burton, Dennis R;
- Andrabi, Raiees
The emergence of current severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants of concern (VOCs) and potential future spillovers of SARS-like coronaviruses into humans pose a major threat to human health and the global economy. Development of broadly effective coronavirus vaccines that can mitigate these threats is needed. Here, we utilized a targeted donor selection strategy to isolate a large panel of human broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnAbs) to sarbecoviruses. Many of these bnAbs are remarkably effective in neutralizing a diversity of sarbecoviruses and against most SARS-CoV-2 VOCs, including the Omicron variant. Neutralization breadth is achieved by bnAb binding to epitopes on a relatively conserved face of the receptor-binding domain (RBD). Consistent with targeting of conserved sites, select RBD bnAbs exhibited protective efficacy against diverse SARS-like coronaviruses in a prophylaxis challenge model in vivo. These bnAbs provide new opportunities and choices for next-generation antibody prophylactic and therapeutic applications and provide a molecular basis for effective design of pan-sarbecovirus vaccines.