Scientific Basis of Vaccines Flashcards

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1
Q

What do vaccine adjuvants do?

A

enhance immune response to antigen
promote uptake and antigen presentation
stimulate correct cytokine profiles

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2
Q

What types of vaccines are there?

A

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

  1. 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
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3
Q

What is conjugation and how does conjugation work?

A

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

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4
Q

What is a toxoid?

A

a chemically modified toxin from a pathogenic microorganism, which is no longer toxic but is still antigenic and can be used as a vaccine.

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