A Cambridge laboratory ran the first human trial of a vaccine whose active ingredient was designed entirely by computer simulation not tweaked or optimised by AI, but built from scratch by it. Nothing like this had been tested in humans before.
The vaccine was developed by the University of Cambridge and a spin-out company called DIOSynVax. Its target is the entire family of Sarbeco coronaviruses the group that includes SARS-CoV-2, the original SARS virus from 2003, and a range of related bat coronaviruses that exist in animal reservoirs and could potentially jump to humans in a future outbreak.
The trial enrolled 39 healthy volunteers between the ages of 18 and 50 at clinical research facilities in Southampton and Cambridge. Results were published in the Journal of Infection on June 5, 2026.
The vaccine was safe. No significant side effects were observed.
And it triggered immune responses not only against SARS-CoV-2 and SARS, but also against related bat coronaviruses that have never infected humans: viruses that exist in nature right now and could cause future pandemics.
Here is why the design method matters.
Traditional vaccines are built reactively. A strain emerges, scientists identify what makes it dangerous, and they build a vaccine targeting that specific version. By the time manufacturing and distribution scale up, the virus has often mutated. The process is always running behind the threat.
The Cambridge AI system took a different approach. It analysed genetic sequence data from across the entire coronavirus family, identified the structural features shared by all of them the parts that remain stable even as viruses mutate and designed a synthetic super-antigen that targets those shared regions simultaneously, including in virus variants that do not yet exist.
"We've converted vaccine development from being reactive to being future-proof," said Professor Jonathan Heeney of Cambridge's Department of Veterinary Medicine, the scientific lead on the project.
This was a Phase 1 trial involving 39 people. It demonstrated safety, not large-scale efficacy. A Phase 2 trial involving more than 200 participants is now being planned.
But this is the first time a vaccine whose active component was designed entirely by computer simulation has been tested in a human body.
That is a line that has now been crossed.
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🚨 ALARMING: Former Bioweapons Contractor: "We Weaponized Ticks to Create a Poor Man's Nuke"
A shocking revelation from a Pentagon insider: the US military actively developed insect based bioweapons.
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