Scientific Basis of Vaccines Flashcards
What do vaccine adjuvants do?
enhance immune response to antigen
promote uptake and antigen presentation
stimulate correct cytokine profiles
What types of vaccines are there?
1.Live, attenuated organism
by:- serial passage,
low temperature adaptation,
recombinant genetics ( S.typhi Ty21a; galE + aroA/B/C mutant)
selection of natural attenuated strains
2.. Killed, whole organism
e.g. pertussis, flu (old type)
polio (Salk type), cholera, HepA
reactogenicity
boosting required
- Sub-unit vaccines (individual components)
- proteins
- toxoids (diphtheria; tetanus)
- peptides (synthetic)
- polysaccharide - poor antigens
- conjugated to toxoid + outer membrane protein (e.g. MenC; Hib;) - recombinant proteins
- sub-cellular fractions
- surface antigens
e. g. Hepatitis B; influenza haemagglutinins; menB - virulence determinant
e. g. aP-pertussis:- adhesin + toxoid + OMP
What is conjugation and how does conjugation work?
Conjugation links polysaccharide antigen to protein carrier (e.g. diphtheria or tetanus) that the infant’s immune system already recognises in order to provoke an immune response
eg a protein can act as a conjugate and the B cell recognises the protein and presents it to a T cell that will recruit cytokines that encourage B cell to make more potent high affinity antibodies all because of the protein conjugate recruiting more T cell help
What is a toxoid?
a chemically modified toxin from a pathogenic microorganism, which is no longer toxic but is still antigenic and can be used as a vaccine.