Stephen Carpenter, MD, PhD
Case Western Reserve University - School of Medicine
Research Project:
Studying T Cell Responses to TB Could Assist Vaccine Development
Grant Awarded:
- Innovation Award
Research Topics:
- basic biologic mechanisms
- biomarkers
- clinical research
- immunology immunotherapy
Research Disease:
- tuberculosis
We have no reliable vaccine to prevent tuberculosis (TB), a disease that kills 1.5 million people every year globally. CD4 T cells are critical for protection against active TB. Determining the key functions and antigenic targets of T cell responses to Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection would advance vaccine development efforts to prevent active TB. We seek to understand the T cell responses obtained from the lungs and blood of healthy individuals early after exposure to a household member with active pulmonary TB. Using cutting edge single-cell analyses, we will track and compare Mtb-specific T cells at early and late time points after exposure and infection. We will examine how T cell responses change over 3-12 months and estimate which T cell subsets efficiently respond to Mt-infected macrophages. This project will generate immunological benchmarks and candidate antigens for new TB vaccines.
Update: The goal of this project is to advance TB vaccine development by studying T cell responses obtained from the lungs and peripheral blood after exposure to a household member with active pulmonary TB. Using cutting edge single-cell analyses, we are tracking and comparing Mtb-specific T cells at early vs. late time points after the participant develops a positive TB test. In the next phase of our project, we will examine how T cell responses change over 6-12 months among individuals who convert to positive test for Mtb infection and estimate which T cells efficiently respond to Mtb-infected macrophages. This project will generate immunological benchmarks and candidate antigens for TB vaccine development.
Page last updated: September 22, 2025
A Breath of Fresh Air in Your Inbox
Join over 700,000 people who receive the latest news about lung health, including research, lung disease, air quality, quitting tobacco, inspiring stories and more!
Thank You!
You will now receive email updates from the American Lung Association.