Module 5 - Immunological Biotechnology Flashcards
1
Q
What does the immune system do?
A
- immune system defends us against invasion and infection from pathogens
- cells of immune system circulate in blood and lymph
- lymph is fluid similar to blood but lacking red blood cells (erythrocytes)
2
Q
What are the two types of immunity?
A
- natural (innate or non-specific) immunity
- non-inducible system
- response doesn’t depend on previous exposure to pathogens or its products
- includes physical barriers of the body (skin, mucous membranes, tears, perspiration)
- babies receive passive natural immunity from their mother (transplacental) that develops immediately and lasts for the first few months of the baby’s life
- includes phagocytes, natural killer (NK) cells (kills body cells that are infected by a microbe), inflammation and fever response
- not always sufficient to fight off pathogens - acquired (adaptive or antigen-specific) immunity
- APCs (antigen presenting cells) present antigens to antigen-MHC (major histocompatibility complex) complexes on their cell surface
- depends on the interaction of T-cell receptor (TCR) and foreign antigen presented by APC
- each TCR has one specificity
- T-cytotoxic (Tc cells) can directly attack and destroy pathogens
- T-helper 1 cells (TH 1 cells) act indirectly by secreting cytokines which activate other cells (macrophages) to destroy antigen-bearing cells. This is called cell-mediated immunity
- T-helper 2 cells (TH 2 cells) interact with antigen-specific B cells and activate them
- activated B cells divide by mitosis to produce a clone of competent B cells
- competent B cells differentiate into plasma cells (make antibodies), and memory B cells
- memory B cells are a part of immunological memory
3
Q
What are polyclonal antibodies?
A
- made from multiple B cell clones
- recognize different epitopes (antigen surfaces)
4
Q
How to make polyclonal antibodies
A
- 1). protein of interest is expressed in a suitable system
- protein is usually expressed in denatured form so only some epitopes are present
- protein is mixed with adjuvant
- pre-immune sera is collected for use as a negative control later
2). protein/adjuvant mix is injected into suitable mammalian host - mouse, rat, rabbit, guinea pig, hamster, etc.
- whole sera collected (starting at 6 weeks)
- tested by Westerns or other methods for antibody production
- pre-immune sera is the control
- goal is to get high-titer (concentration), high-affinity (strong binding), and high-specificity sera
5
Q
What are monoclonal antibodies?
A
- monoclonal antibodies are difficult/expensive to make but are useful
- recognizes specific epitopes on a specific protein
- made from a single clone of B cells
- B cells don’t divide on their own in culture, so they are fused with an immortal cancer cell: hybridoma
- steps in protein injection in a suitable host (usually a mouse) is essentially the same as in polyclonal antibodies
- however, instead of blood sera being collected, spleen and lymph nodes are collected
- fusion with tumour cells to make hybridomas
- hybridomas are diluted and plated in cell culture so that there is only one per plate
- screened for desired antibody (Ab) production (ELISA)
- useful clones are selected and maintained
6
Q
What is immunofluorescence?
A
- fluorescent tag attached to antibody which allows target protein to be identified in cell or tissue staining experiments
7
Q
What are vaccines?
A
- injection of antigens into individuals
- stimulates long-term immunity which will protect the individual against subsequent infection by pathogen carrying that antigen
8
Q
Types of vaccines
A
1). live attenuated vaccines
2). inactivated vaccines
3). subunit vaccines
4). toxoid vaccines
5). conjugate vaccines
6). nucleic acid vaccines
7). recombinant vector vaccines
9
Q
What are live attenuated vaccines?
A
- microbe is weakened by growth in the lab so it doesn’t cause disease
10
Q
What are inactivated vaccines?
A
- kill microbe with heat, chemicals, or radiation
11
Q
What are subunit vaccines?
A
- 1-20 epitopes or antigens vs. an entire microbe
- can grow the microbe and then break it apart to create antigens
- can express antigens separately using recombinant DNA techniques
12
Q
What are toxoid vaccines?
A
- toxin secreted by microbe (vs. microbe itself) used for vaccination
- treat toxin with formalin (formaldehyde + sterile water) to inactivate toxins
13
Q
What are conjugate vaccines?
A
- specifically for infants and young children
- polysaccharide coating on certain pathogenic bacteria can hide the antigen from the immune system
14
Q
What are nucleic acid vaccines?
A
- introduce genes as ‘naked DNA’ in patient
- genes will express antigenic proteins in patient
- patient manufactures antigens that stimulate his/her own immune response
15
Q
What are recombinant vector vaccines?
A
- delivery vector as carrier instead
- delivery vector might be attenuated virus or bacteria with harmful genes as ‘DNA of interest’