Intranasal BCG vaccination induces systemic and pulmonary mucosal immune responses against tuberculosis in a goat model
Author
Publication date
2026-01-02ISSN
1664-3224
Abstract
Early immune containment of mycobacteria at the infection site is key to tuberculosis (TB) vaccine development. Intranasal delivery strategies offer a promising alternative to parenteral BCG vaccination, particularly for pulmonary TB, the predominant clinical form in humans and livestock. This study evaluated the immunogenicity of intranasal BCG and heat-inactivated M. bovis (HIMB) with or without adjuvant, as well as prime-boost strategies combining parenteral BCG or HIMB followed by intranasal HIMB in young goats. Intranasal BCG elicited systemic antigen-specific IFNγ production, with enhanced expansion of CD4+IFNγ+ and CD8+IFNγ+ T-cells, comparable to prime-boost regimens. Intranasal BCG and prime-boosted groups also induced higher local proinflammatory responses at the lung mucosa, including proinflammatory cytokine production, expansion of antigen-specific T-cells, and polarization of alveolar macrophages toward activated proinflammatory phenotype. The results underscore the potential of respiratory mucosal BCG delivery to enhance early immune responses against TB infection and support further investigation into its protective efficacy.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
619 - Veterinary science
Pages
15
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Is part of
Frontiers in Immunology
Grant agreement number
MICINN/Programa Estatal para impulsar la investigación científico-técnica y su transferencia/PID2022-142939OR-C22/ES/NUEVAS APROXIMACIONES DE VACUNACION MUCOSAL CONTRA LA TUBERCULOSIS EN EL MODELO CAPRINO: EVALUACION DE LA INMUNOGENICIDAD, EFICACIA Y EFECTOS EN EL DIAGNOSTICO/
EC/INTERREG-POCTEFA/EFA115-01/EU/Red transpirenaica de investigación y desarrollo de herramientas innovadoras para el control de la tuberculosis animal/INNOTUB II
FEDER/ / /EU/ /
Program
Sanitat Animal
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This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3608]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


