Vaccines Flashcards
What is vaccination?
Deliberate act of inducing adaptive immunity by injecting someone with a vaccine (dead, attenuated, non pathogenic) form of the pathogen.
What are the two forms of passive immunity?
Natural - IgG transfer from mother to foetus, IgA in colostrum breast milk (few days after birth)
Active - Use of Abs (Roden/human/chimeric/humanized)
How was passive immunity used against Ebola?
Ebola is a ssRNA filovirus which mainly infects endothelial cells, mononuclear phagocytes and hepatocytes - cause haemorrhage - NO VACCINE
Zmapp - 3 chimeric mAbs against glycoprotein produced by EBOV - produced by taking genes from hybridoma and replacing constant region with human genes. Then transfect into tobacco plant to express (pharming).
Tested in rhesus macaque - all survived
Used in 2014 ebola outbreak in W Africa - 7 given - 2 died - NS
Discuss passive immunity against enterovirus?
Respiratory RNA virus - causes pneumonia in children/young adults
A6-1 targets VP-1 - shown to have benefits in mice
What other disease can we use passive immunity techniques against?
Botulism - infant botulism - Baby BIG - IgG pooled from adults plasma immunised with pentavalent botulism toxin - select for high affinity against type A+B
What cells are responsible for immunological memory?
Memory B and Memory T cells
What are the advantages of memory B cells over naive t cells?
Higher frequency
Longer lasting
Higher IgG IgA amounts (effector Abs)
Increased somatic hypermutation
What are the three types of T cell?
Naive - not yet seen antigen (CD45RA)
Effector - directs affects against antigen (Th1, Th2)
Memory - stays in blood to deal with future responses (CD45RO - associates with TCR and CD4)
What are the two types of effector T cells?
Central Memory T cells - CD45RO, CCR7, CD62L, stays in lymph node - slower maturation to effector cells
Effector Memory T cells - CD45RO - loses CCR7 upon Ag stimulation - moves into tissues and releases cytokines etc.
What are the main requirements for a vaccine?
Safe Effective Long lasting Right response (B/T, Systemic/local) Low cost Stable Easy to administer
What are the different types of vaccine?
Live attenuated (Whole agent) Killed (whole agent) Recombinant subunit Purified subunit Conjugate
Give examples of live attenuated? :)/:(
MMR, Oral polio (Sabin), BCG
:) - induce systemic and local response, can give via natural pathway, do not need booster shots
:( - can alter virulence, can become inactivated and may cause damage in immunocompromised host
Give examples of killed? :)/:(
Salk Polio, pertussis, typhoid, cholera
Kill using formaldehyde - must ensure antigens do not get denatured
Wont induce disease, stable
Give examples of recombinant subunit? :)/:(
HepB - HepBsAg
Avoids problems with bulk pathogen storage
Purified subunit? :)/:(
HiB - purified capsular polysaccharides - meningitis
Influenza - purified H and N
Conjugate? :)/:(
Fusion of polysaccharide - weak antigen + strong antigen - HiB conjugate vaccine (conjugated to tetanus, diptheria)
What is an adjuvent?
Given with a vaccine to boost the immune response. Induces damage to host tissue
Give 2 examples of adjuvent
Alum - PRR Nalp3 - Hib/pertussis/diptheria
MPLA - TLR4 - HiB