Vaccines, Vol. 13, Pages 1248: Vaccine Platform-Dependent Differential Impact on Microbiome Diversity: Potential Advantages of Protein Subunit Vaccines
Vaccines doi: 10.3390/vaccines13121248
Authors:
Hye Seong
Jin Gu Yoon
Eliel Nham
Yu Jung Choi
Ji Yun Noh
Hee Jin Cheong
Woo Joo Kim
Sooyeon Lim
Joon Young Song
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated the development of diverse vaccine platforms, including mRNA, adenoviral vector, and protein subunit vaccines. Given the growing evidence that the gut microbiome modulates vaccine-induced immunity, this study compared the effects of a protein subunit vaccine (NVX-CoV2373), an mRNA vaccine (BNT162b2), and an adenoviral vector vaccine (ChAdOx1) on gut microbiome diversity following booster vaccination. Methods: We conducted a prospective cohort study involving 35 healthy adults who received an NVX-CoV2373 booster. Stool and blood samples were collected before vaccination and three weeks afterward. Gut microbiome profiles were analyzed using 16S rRNA gene sequencing, and the results were compared with our previous cohorts who received BNT162b2 or ChAdOx1 vaccines. Results: The NVX-CoV2373 booster was associated with a significant increase in the Shannon diversity index (p = 0.027), indicating enhanced alpha diversity. This finding contrasts with the decrease or absence of significant short-term change observed following repeated administrations of adenoviral vector and mRNA vaccines, respectively. Notably, NVX-CoV2373 vaccination was accompanied by an increased relative abundance of beneficial taxa such as Bacteroides fragilis and a decrease in Prevotella bivia. In comparison, repeated ChAdOx1 doses resulted in a sustained reduction in alpha diversity, whereas BNT162b2 showed a transient post-booster rise followed by a long-term decline in species richness. Conclusions: In the booster setting, the protein subunit vaccine NVX-CoV2373 exerted a distinct and favorable effect on gut microbiome diversity, increasing alpha diversity in contrast to the patterns observed with mRNA and adenoviral vector booster vaccines.
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Hye Seong www.mdpi.com

