Calman A. MacLennan
BM, BCh, DPhil, FHEA, FRCP, FRCPath
Professor of Vaccine Immunology (University of Birmingham)
- Jenner Investigator and Group Leader - Gonococcal Vaccine Project, Jenner Institute
- Director of BactiVac, the Bacterial Vaccines Network, Institute of Immunology and Immunotherapy, University of Birmingham, UK
- Consultant Immunologist, Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, UK
- Senior Program Officer, Bacterial Vaccines, Global Health, Enteric & Diarrheal Diseases, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Seattle, US
Vaccinologist, Immunologist & Clinician Scientist focused on bacterial infections and AMR
Calman MacLennan is a clinician scientist, vaccinologist and immunologist who joined the Jenner Institute in 2015. For the past 25 years, his career has focused on understanding mechanisms of immunological of protection against bacterial infections of global health significance and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) concern. This knowledge has then been applied to the development of protective vaccines.
With experience of vaccine development in academia and industry, he has been involved in the development of several bacterial vaccines including one licensed vaccine against typhoid and other vaccines currently in clinical trials.
He leads the Gonococcal Vaccine Project which is using native Outer Membrane Vesicle (nOMV) technology to develop a candidate vaccine against Neisseria gonorrhoeae, the causative agent of gonorrhoea. Gonorrhoea infects 82.4 million people each year and is rapidly becoming resistant to all known antibiotics.
Professor MacLennan is the founder and director of BactiVac, the Bacterial Vaccines Network, a worldwide network based out of the University of Birmingham with a mission to accelerate the development of vaccines against bacterial pathogens as a countermeasure to AMR. He is a Consultant Immunologist at the Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.
Key publications
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Impact and Control of Sugar Size in Glycoconjugate Vaccines.
Journal article
Stefanetti G. et al, (2022), Molecules, 27
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The Shigella Vaccines Pipeline.
Journal article
MacLennan CA. et al, (2022), Vaccines (Basel), 10
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Threshold protective levels of serum IgG to Shigella lipopolysaccharide: re-analysis of Shigella vaccine trials data.
Journal article
Cohen D. et al, (2022), Clin Microbiol Infect