Targeted delivery of the BCG vaccine to dendritic cells improves protective efficacy against Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Claudio Counoupas, Annuurun Nisa, Lucy Baker, Rachel Pinto, Nayan Bhattacharyya, Caroline Demangel, P.D. Britton, James A. Triccas
Vaccine · 2026-05
Abstract
Tuberculosis (TB) is the world's deadliest infectious disease, and the current vaccine, Bacillus Calmette-Guérin (BCG), is only partially effective. We hypothesised that BCG interacts sub-optimally with dendritic cells (DCs), key mediators of adaptive immunity. To improve BCG's efficacy, we engineered the vaccine to express a single-chain variable fragment (scFv) targeting the DEC-205 receptor on DCs (BCG:DEC). This modification enhanced BCG interaction with DEC-205-expressing cells, resulting in increased uptake into host cells and cytokine/chemokine secretion. After vaccination of mice, BCG:DEC increased MHC-II expression on vaccine-site myeloid cells, showed enhanced uptake by skin-resident DC subsets and generated higher frequencies of multifunctional, cytokine-secreting CD4 + T cell populations. Compared to BCG alone, BCG:DEC provided improved and sustained protection up to 20 weeks post-challenge against Mycobacterium tuberculosis in mice. Thus, DC-targeted BCG is a promising approach for TB control.
MeSH terms
- Medicine
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Mycobacterium bovis
- BCG vaccine
- Tuberculosis vaccines
- Tuberculosis
- Virology
- Immunology
- Vaccination
- Immune system
- Dendritic cell
- Vaccine efficacy