Trinity College Develops Groundbreaking Nasal Vaccine to Block Pertussis Transmission and Strengthen Immunity

November 10, 2025
Trinity College Develops Groundbreaking Nasal Vaccine to Block Pertussis Transmission and Strengthen Immunity
  • Even a single dose of AIBP demonstrates substantial protection and outperforms current acellular vaccines in preventing nasal infection.

  • The AIBP platform inactivates B. pertussis with ciprofloxacin to preserve cellular structures and epitopes, enabling robust mucosal T cell–driven protection against respiratory infection.

  • Post-immunization, there is an rise in Th17 and Th1 CD4+ T cells, enhancing mucosal barrier function and microbial clearance, with tissue-retaining T cells supporting long-term immunity.

  • Protection is primarily mediated by T cells rather than antibodies, with tissue-resident memory T cells in the nasal mucosa driving rapid, localized responses upon exposure.

  • Delivery is needle-free and mucosal, designed to elicit durable local immunity at the infection site and foster a T-cell–driven response with limited systemic inflammation.

  • The nasal, aerosol-like administration not only strengthens protection against nasal infection but also has potential to interrupt community spread of pertussis and other respiratory pathogens.

  • The vaccine works by delivering mucosal immunity via the nasal route, aiming to generate strong local T cell responses and IgA production with minimal systemic inflammation.

  • Future work will assess how durable mucosal T cell memory is, booster needs, and where exactly in the respiratory tract the vaccine should be delivered to maximize protection.

  • In preclinical models, intranasal AIBP provides superior protection against nasal infection compared to current vaccines, with efficacy linked to local IL-17 and IFN-γ–producing TRM cells and nasal IgA.

  • Compared with whole-cell vaccines, AIBP yields stronger mucosal IgA and TRM responses in the respiratory tract, while whole-cell vaccines induce stronger systemic IgG but less mucosal protection.

  • A Trinity College Dublin team has developed a novel intranasal vaccine for pertussis, using antibiotic-inactivated Bordetella pertussis (AIBP) to prevent severe disease and, importantly, reduce nasal carriage and transmission.

  • The AIBP platform is a programmable, plug-and-play system potentially adaptable to other pathogens, offering broader applications beyond pertussis.

  • Lead researchers describe the approach as targeting the respiratory mucosa to achieve stronger protection without systemic inflammation, presenting a fundamentally different vaccine paradigm.

  • Safety profile appears favorable with limited systemic inflammation and no respiratory tract colonization observed in mice after aerosol or intranasal delivery.

  • This mucosal strategy focuses on blocking nasal colonization and transmission rather than just preventing disease, signaling a shift from traditional acellular vaccines.

  • If effective in humans, the nasal AIBP vaccine could reduce transmission and broaden protection, addressing urgent global demand for next-generation respiratory vaccines.

  • Preclinical studies show AIBP provides complete protection in both lungs and nasal passages, with two-dose regimens via aerosol achieving sterilizing immunity.

  • AIBP robustly generates B. pertussis–specific CD4+ tissue-resident memory cells in lungs and nasal tissues, producing IFN-γ and IL-17, along with antigen-specific nasal IgA, correlates of protection against colonization.

  • Funding and support include a Research Ireland Frontiers for the Future Award and ongoing development under a €32 million ARC Hub for Therapeutics, spanning 2021–2027.

  • If translated to humans, mucosal, T cell–driven immunity could block transmission and help achieve herd immunity, reshaping next-generation vaccines for pertussis and other mucosal pathogens.

  • AIBP maintains efficacy in mice primed with conventional aP vaccines, showing compatibility and additive benefits with existing immunization strategies.

  • Context: Current pertussis vaccines mainly prevent severe disease but do not prevent nasal colonization or transmission, underscoring the need for vaccines that block infection at the entry point.

  • Translational steps include validating in human trials, optimizing inactivation to preserve T cell epitopes, refining mucosal delivery formulations, and exploring combinations with existing vaccines.

  • Durable mucosal immunity is indicated, with AIBP-induced protection and TRM responses remaining elevated for months after immunization and challenge.

  • In vivo data show significantly lower bacterial loads in nasal tissues of immunized mice after live B. pertussis challenge, indicating effective prevention of colonization.

  • The vaccine uses antibiotic inactivation to stop replication while preserving antigenic structures and is delivered to engage the mucosal immune system.

  • AIBP activates local antigen-presenting cells and drives Th1/Th17 responses in the respiratory tract, including IL-1β, IL-12p70, and IL-23, with minimal systemic inflammation.

  • Key researchers include Kingston Mills and Davoud Jazayeri, and the findings were published in Nature Microbiology in 2025, with the DOI 10.1038/s41564-025-02166-6.

Summary based on 4 sources


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