Immune Therapies Flashcards
what is the most effective strategy to prevent infectious disease?
vaccination
how do vaccines work?
replicate immunity from natural infection without illness
- primary aim is to stimulate adaptive immunity and generate long-term immunological memory
what immune response occurs 0-12 hours after infection?
innate immunity
- inflammatory response
what occurs 1-7 days after infection?
adaptive immune response
- dendritic antigen presenting cells stimulate T cells
- effector T cell (clones) activate B cells
- B cells become plasma cells which produce highly specific antibodies
explain the induction of highly specific antibodies (to natural infection) via the primary response:
- low specificity IgM produced first
- high specificity IgG takes longer (requires T cell help causing lag)
explain the induction of highly specific antibodies (to natural infection) via the secondary response:
- high specificity IgG produced by long-lived plasma cells
- more rapid
- more effective
how do vaccines initiate the immune response?
by exposing our immune system to disease-causes microbial antigens (but without disease!)
- pathogen is modified making it unable to cause disease
what are the different types of vaccines?
- live attenuated
- inactivated
- subunit
- viral vector
what is a live attenuated vaccine? an example of this?
- live pathogen but weakened via genetic manipulations
- MMR, BCG
are live attenuated vaccines successful? when may they not be suitable?
- excellent life long immunity
- potentially pathogenic in immunocomprimised
what is an inactivated vaccine? an example of this?
- pathogen is killed through chemical or physical processes
- cannot replicate or cause disease
- Polio
are inactivated vaccines effective?
- safer than live vaccines but less effective
- weak immunity
- therefor several doses required
what are the different kinds of subunit vaccines?
- recombinant
- toxoid
- polysaccharide
- conjugate
what are subunit vaccines?
purified antigens (no live components or whole organism)
what are recombinant subunit vaccines? an example of this?
- contains the protein receptor that the virus uses to attach to our cells (to stimulate immunity)
- Hep B, HPV
what are toxoid subunit vaccines? an example of this?
- inactivated bacterial toxins
- Diphtheria and Tetanus