- Abt, Evan;
- Lam, Alex;
- Noguchi, Miyako;
- Rashid, Khalid;
- McLaughlin, Jami;
- Teng, Pu-Lin;
- Tran, Wendy;
- Cheng, Donghui;
- Nesterenko, Pavlo;
- Mao, Zhiyuan;
- Creech, Amanda;
- Burton Sojo, Giselle;
- Jeyachandran, Arjit;
- Tam, Ying;
- Henley, Jill;
- Comai, Lucio;
- Pardi, Norbert;
- Arumugaswami, Vaithilingaraja;
- Witte, Owen;
- Radu, Caius;
- Wu, Ting-Ting
Combining a T cell-targeting mRNA vaccine encoding the conserved SARS-CoV-2 RNA-dependent RNA polymerase, RdRp, with a Spike-encoding mRNA vaccine may offer an additional pathway toward COVID-19 protection. Here, we show that a nucleoside-modified RdRp mRNA vaccine raises robust and durable CD8+ T cell responses in mice. Immunization drives a CD8+ T cell response enriched toward a specific RdRp epitope. Unexpectedly, coadministration of mRNA vaccines encoding RdRp or the Spike Receptor Binding Domain (RBD) dampens RBD-specific immune responses. Contralateral administration reduces the suppression of RBD-specific T cell responses while type I interferon signaling blockade restores RBD-specific antibodies. A staggered immunization strategy maintains both RBD vaccine-mediated antibody and T cell responses as well as protection against lethal SARS-CoV-2 challenge in human ACE2 transgenic mice. In HLA-A2.1 transgenic mice, the RdRp vaccine elicits CD8+ T cell responses against HLA-A*02:01-restricted epitopes recognized by human donor T cells. These results highlight RdRp as a candidate antigen for COVID-19 vaccines. The findings also offer insights into crafting effective multivalent mRNA vaccines to broaden CD8+ T cell responses against SARS-CoV-2 and potentially other viruses with pandemic potential.