Vaccinations (1/14) Flashcards
What are the similarities and differences between Naive T cells and Memory T cells?
Memory T cells don’t require CD28 (2nd receptor) to activate
Memory T cells can be activated by a broader array of antigen presenting cells (DC, B cells, ET cells, macrophages) whereas naive T cells can only be activated by dendritic cells
Memory T cells can produce many types of cytokines whereas naive T cells only make IL-2
Where are memory T cells found in the body?
Everywhere- in all major tissues in your body– lung, liver, skin, intestine – act as important sentinels
Naive T cells are mostly in spleen/marrow
When you’re an adult, most of your T cells are memory T cells
What are neutralizing antibodies? How are they involved in protective immunity?
They are antibodies that bind to surface strucutres of viruses/bacteria
These are also the structures that are highly mutated among different strains of bacteria, so vaccination against one strain might not protect you against other strains (although cowpox innoculation protects against smallpox)
What are the mechanisms of T cell mediated protection?
Cytoxic T cells: Fas binding to virus infected cell leads to secretion of cytotoxins for exocytosis & cytokines - tons of IFN-gamma + LT
Th1 cells: bind macrophages that contain bacteria, activate killing response, secrete lots of cytokines
Th2 cells: bind B cells to activate creation of lots of antibodies, secret tons of cytokines
What are the 3 main strategies for vaccines?
- Killed bacteria/inactivated virus
- Live-attenuated viruses
- Subunit vaccines: i.e. toxin protein, viral protein subunits
How is an attenuated virus made?
- Isolate pathogenic virus from patient & grow in human cultured cells
- Infect the cultured virus into monkey cells
- The virus acquires many mutations that allows it to grow well in monkey cells
- Now the virus no longer grows well in human cells & can be used as vaccine
What are adjuvants?
Something that act as delivery systems to enhance an immune response against antigen in vaccines i.e. provide necessary second signal or stimulate innate immunity
This allows antigen sparing when you need many doses
Examples: alum enhances uptake by APC, active inflammasome, stimulates Th2 mediated responses
water/oil emulsion: can act as an irritant
Why is it difficult/impossible to make a vaccine for malaria?
There is no memory response to malaria, even in those who have been infected
What are 3 major challenges for vaccines?
- pathogens mutate at high rates i.e. influenze –> problem bc you can make a vaccine but not anticipate a new strand, so the vaccine won’t include the new strain
- chronic viral infections establish latency
- cancer: tumors evade immune responses
Why is it hard for vaccines to work against chronic infections?
Chronic infection turns on the negative regulators of the T cell response –> lots of chronic viruses are able to persist bc T cells are turned off
Antiviral therapies are the best treatment
Do vaccines cause disease or worsen clinical outcome to pathogen exposure?
This happened in early polio vaccination- some people got polio from the attenuated strain