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Download Viral Vaccines - Molecular Immunology
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Vaccines Immunity Specific defenses Immunity Active immunity Following clinical infection Passive immunity natural Following subclinical infection Transfer of maternal Antibodies Through placenta Transfer of maternal Antibodies Through milk acquired Following vaccination Following administration of Immunoglobulin or antiserum Active immunity • Resistance developed in response to stimulus by an antigen (infecting agent or vaccine) and is characterized by the production of antibodies by the host. Passive immunity • Immunity conferred by an antibody produced in another host. It may be acquired naturally or artificially (through an antibody-containing preparation). Immunizing agents Immunizing agents vaccines immunuglobulins antisera Vaccination • Vaccination is a method of giving antigen to stimulate the immune response through active immunization. • A vaccine is an immuno-biological substance designed to produce specific protection against a given disease. • A vaccine is “antigenic” but not “pathogenic”. Let’s go back in time to see how this strategy works The time: 500 B.C. The place: Greece Even 2,500 Years Ago, People Knew Immunity Worked. • Greek physicians noticed that people who survived smallpox never got it again. • The insight: Becoming infected by certain diseases gives immunity. Fast forward 2300 years I had a brilliant idea pathmicro.med.sc.edu/ppt-vir/vaccine.ppt Vaccination • Charles Jenner 1796 : Cowpox/Swinepox • 1800’s Compulsory childhood vaccination Smallpox •1% v. 25% mortality •Life-long immunity • UK: 1700’s • China 1950 • Pakistan/Afghanistan/ Ethiopia 1970 pathmicro.med.sc.edu/ppt-vir/vaccine.ppt Smallpox presented many advantages that made this possible • No animal reservoir • Lifelong immunity • Subclinical cases rare • Infectivity does not precede overt symptoms • One serotype • pathmicro.med.sc.edu/ppt-vir/vaccine.ppt As a result, after a world-wide effort Smallpox was eliminated as a human disease in 1978 pathmicro.med.sc.edu/ppt-vir/vaccine.ppt Types of vaccines • • • • • Live vaccines Attenuated live vaccines Inactivated (killed vaccines) Toxoids Polysaccharide and polypeptide (cellular fraction) vaccines • Surface antigen (recombinant) vaccines. Live vaccines • Live vaccines are made from live infectious agents without any amendment. • The only live vaccine is “Variola” small pox vaccine, made of live vaccinia cow-pox virus (not variola virus) which is not pathogenic but antigenic, giving cross immunity for variola. Live attenuated (avirulent) vaccines • Virulent pathogenic organisms are treated to become attenuated and avirulent but antigenic. They have lost their capacity to induce full-blown disease but retain their immunogenicity. • Live attenuated vaccines should not be administered to persons with suppressed immune response due to: – – – – – Leukemia and lymphoma Other malignancies Receiving corticosteroids and anti-metabolic agents Radiation pregnancy Live Attenuated Vaccines have several advantages • Attenuated (weakened) form of the "wild" virus or bacterium • Can replicate themselves so the immune response is more similar to natural infection • Usually effective with one dose Live Attenuated Vaccines also have several disadvantages • Severe reactions possible especially in immune compromised patients • Worry about recreating a wild-type pathogen that can cause disease • Fragile – must be stored carefully MMWR, CDC A number of the vaccines you received were live Attenuated Vaccines • Viral measles, mumps, rubella, vaccinia, varicella/zoster, yellow fever, rotavirus, intranasal influenza, oral polio • Bacterial BCG (TB), oral typhoid Inactivated (killed) vaccines • Organisms are killed or inactivated by heat or chemicals but remain antigenic. • They are usually safe but less effective than live attenuated vaccines. • The only absolute contraindication to their administration is a severe local or general reaction to a previous dose. Inactivated Vaccines Minuses • Cannot replicate and thus generally not as effective as live vaccines • Usually require 3-5 doses • Immune response mostly antibody based Inactivated Vaccines Pluses • No chance of recreating live pathogen • Less interference from circulating antibody than live vaccines Inactivated Vaccines are also a common approach today Whole-cell vaccines • Viral polio, hepatitis A, rabies, influenza* • Bacterial pertussis*, typhoid* cholera*, plague* *not used in the United States Other Inactivated Vaccines now contain purified proteins rather than whole bacteria/viruses • Proteins hepatitis B, influenza, acellular pertussis, human papillomavirus, anthrax, Lyme • Toxins diphtheria, tetanus Sabin Polio Vaccine Attenuated by passage in foreign host (monkey kidney cells) Selection to grow in new host makes virus less suited to original host Sabin Polio Vaccine Attenuated by passage in foreign host (monkey kidney cells) Selection to grow in new host makes virus less suited to original host • Grows in epithelial cells • Does not grow in nerves • No paralysis •Local gut immunity (IgA) Salk Polio Vaccine • Formaldehyde-fixed • No reversion Polio Vaccine illustrates the pluses and minuses of live vaccines US: Sabin attenuated vaccine ~ 10 cases vaccine-associated polio per year = 1 in 4,000,000 vaccine infections Scandinavia: Salk dead vaccine • No gut immunity • Cannot wipe out wt virus pathmicro.med.sc.edu/ppt-vir/vaccine.ppt Live virus generates a more complete immune response 512 Killed (Salk) Vaccine Live (Sabin) Vaccine Serum IgG Serum IgG Reciprocal virus antibody titer 128 32 Serum IgM Serum IgM Nasal IgA Serum IgA 8 Serum IgA 2 Duodenal IgA Nasal and duodenal IgA 1 Vaccination 4 8 96 Days Vaccination 48 9 6 Modern molecular biology has offered new approaches to make vaccines 1. Clone gene from virus or bacteria and express this protein antigen in yeast, bacteria or mammalian cells in culture Modern molecular biology has offered new approaches to make vaccines 2. Clone gene from virus or bacteria Into genome of another virus (adenovirus, canary pox, vaccinia) And use this live virus as vaccine Cloned protein antigens have pluses and minuses Pluses •Easily manufactured and often relatively stable •Cannot “revert” to recreate pathogen Minuses • Poorly immunogenic • Post-translational modifications • Poor CTL response Viral vectors have pluses and minuses Pluses • Infects human cells but some do not replicate • Better presentation of antigen • Generate T cell response Minuses •Can cause bad reactions •Can be problems with pre-exisiting immunity to virus •Often can only accommodate one or two antigens Toxoids • They are prepared by detoxifying the exotoxins of some bacteria rendering them antigenic but not pathogenic. Adjuvant (e.g. alum precipitation) is used to increase the potency of vaccine. • The antibodies produces in the body as a consequence of toxoid administration neutralize the toxic moiety produced during infection rather than act upon the organism itself. In general toxoids are highly efficacious and safe immunizing agents. Polysaccharide and polypeptide (cellular fraction) vaccines • They are prepared from extracted cellular fractions e.g. meningococcal vaccine from the polysaccharide antigen of the cell wall, the pneumococcal vaccine from the polysaccharide contained in the capsule of the organism, and hepatitis B polypeptide vaccine. • Their efficacy and safety appear to be high. Surface antigen (recombinant) vaccines. • It is prepared by cloning HBsAg gene in yeast cells where it is expressed. HBsAg produced is then used for vaccine preparations. • Their efficacy and safety also appear to be high. Types of vaccines Live vaccines Live Killed Attenuate Inactivated d vaccines vaccines •Small pox variola vaccine •BCG •Typhoid oral •Plague •Oral polio •Yellow fever •Measles •Mumps •Rubella •Intranasal Influenza •Typhus Toxoids Cellular fraction Recombinant vaccines vaccines •Typhoid •Diphtheria •Meningococcal •Hepatitis B polysaccharide vaccine •Cholera •Tetanus vaccine •Pertussis •Pneumococcal •Plague polysaccharide •Rabies vaccine •Salk polio •Hepatitis B •Intrapolypeptide muscular vaccine influenza •Japanise encephalitis Routes of administration • Deep subcutaneous or intramuscular route (most vaccines) • Oral route (sabine vaccine, oral BCG vaccine) • Intradermal route (BCG vaccine) • Scarification (small pox vaccine) • Intranasal route (live attenuated influenza vaccine) Scheme of immunization • Primary vaccination – One dose vaccines (BCG, variola, measles, mumps, rubella, yellow fever) – Multiple dose vaccines (polio, DPT, hepatitis B) • Booster vaccination To maintain immunity level after it declines after some time has elapsed (DT, MMR). Periods of maintained immunity due to vaccines • • • • • • Short period (months): cholera vaccine Two years: TAB vaccine Three to five years: DPT vaccine Five or more years: BCG vaccine Ten years: yellow fever vaccine Solid immunity: measles, mumps, and rubella vaccines. Levels of effectiveness • Absolutely protective(100%): yellow fever vaccine • Almost absolutely protective (99%): Variola, measles, mumps, rubella vaccines, and diphtheria and tetanus toxoids. • Highly protective (80-95%): polio, BCG, Hepatitis B, and pertussis vaccines. • Moderately protective (40-60%) TAB, cholera vaccine, and influenza killed vaccine.