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Lecture 10 Vaccines

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To understand the advantages & disadvantages ... To become aware of the range of antimicrobials available ... Inert less immunogenic- may need frequent boosters ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 10 Vaccines


1
Lecture 10Vaccines Antimicrobials
  • Aims
  • To be aware of the different types of vaccines
    used to combat human infections
  • To understand the advantages disadvantages of
    each type
  • To be aware of how vaccines are made and gain
    knowledge of some important vaccines
  • To become aware of the range of antimicrobials
    available
  • To understand how resistance or sensitivity to an
    antimicrobial may be determined

2
A vaccine defined
  • A vaccine is generally a biological substance
    which can be used to illicit an immune response
    in a host which may be protective in the event
    that the host is subsequently exposed to the
    virulent (disease causing) form of the infectious
    agent

3
Vaccine types
  • 2 main types
  • Live attenuated
  • Inert
  • We will look later at how an immune response can
    be generated by vaccines (immunology section)

4
Live attenuated vaccines
  • Can use live agents of either
  • Weak or weakened strains of virulent agent
  • Eg Sabine polio vaccine
  • Or
  • Closely related species which provide cross
    protection
  • Eg cow pox against small pox

5
Inert vaccines
  • Includes
  • Killed or inactivated eg Salk against polio
  • Recombinant eg HBV
  • Fractionated eg HBVsAg from chronic carriers
  • Newer forms of DNA vaccines

6
Inert v live vaccines
  • Inert no chance of reversion eg 1106 polio
  • Inert less immunogenic- may need frequent
    boosters
  • eg natural HBV following recovery gives almost
    lifelng protection cw vaccine lt10years in many
    cases

7
Manufacture of vaccines
  • In the past main method by killing whole microbe
  • Generally used formalin
  • Problem was changes caused by formalin to
    important microbial structures
  • Current methods use rec expression
  • Live vaccines usually attenuated- have advantage
    of few side effects and generally effective

8
Problems with vaccines
  • Measles vaccine has been associated with SSPE
    (s/acute slerosing panencephalomelitis)
  • If this SSPE problem had been recognized in 1960s
    under the current guidelines, it would require
    SSPE testing- for which there is currently no
    known marker

9
Problems with vaccines
  • Polio (Sabin) about 11,000,000 doses revert to
    neurovirulence
  • Unlikely under current regulations that the
    vaccine would be licenced because would need to
    demonstrate genetic stability-3rd world
    implications for this cheap oral vaccine

10
Problems with vaccines
  • Influenza vaccine In 1976 US govt funded 200M
    program to vaccinate entire population against
    Flu A
  • Program abandoned after 40M doses because
    11,000,000 doses appeared to be associated with
    Guillain-Barr syndrome (not seen since,but
    litigations still running at about 1billion)

11
Introduction to making a rec vaccine
  • Several important steps are needed
  • Determine epitopes (antigenic detrminants)
  • Clone into a manufacturing cell eg yeast
  • Need to illicit appropriate (protective) and long
    term immune response (longevity)
  • Advantages of subunit or rec vaccines include QC
    easier, safe, lttoxicity, stability can be
    tested,may be only way for problem agents eg HIV

12
What is an epitope?
13
What is an Antibody? (immunoglobulin)
14
How do antibodies attach to antigens (epitopes)?
15
Examples of current vaccines
  • HBV HBsAg rec vaccine grown in yeast
  • Rubella (ssRNA virus) currently use live
    attenuated strain(Cendehill or RA/27/3)
  • S.pneumoniae capsular polysaccharide extract of
    bacterium (subunit vaccine) used in trauma
    patients especially asplenic

16
Introduction to antimicrobials
  • A/microbials have selective toxicity
  • Antibiotics
  • Antibiotics are naturally produced (bacteria and
    fungi) or synthetically modified chemicals
  • Interfere with metabolism of target bacteria eg
    cell wall, protein, DNA synthesis

17
Factors affecting antibiotic efficacy
  • Concentration of active form
  • Binding to protein
  • Half life
  • Mechanism of excretion
  • Ability to perfuse into target eg CSF

18
Problems with antibiotics
  • Toxicity (some for external use only, others
    accumulate)
  • Anaphylaxis
  • Resistance
  • Limited spectrum-is this a problem?
  • Oral/parenteral limits

19
Working out which antibiotic?
  • MIC minimal inhibitory dose
  • eg 20µg/mL
  • MBC minimal bacteriocidal dose
  • eg 10µg/mL

20
Antibiotic resistance
  • Can arise by
  • Selection pressure (high use picks for survivors)
  • The R can be effected by
  • The bacterium becoming
  • Impermiable to a/biotic
  • Alteration of target site
  • Change of target pathways
  • Producing enzymes to destroy antibiotic
  • Genetic transfer-conjugation, transduction,
    transformation,

21
Examples of antibiotic groups
  • Betalactams (penicillins)-target cell wall
  • Oral and parenteral forms
  • Depending on type, can have restricted or broad
    spectrum of activity G/G-, G
  • Subject to
  • Betalactamases
  • Permiability changes
  • Adsorption site changes
  • Bacterium must have cell wall
  • Eg penicillin G, amoxicillin, cephalosporins

22
The betalactam ring of penicillins
23
Examples contin...
  • Aminoglycosides (aa attached to aminocylitol)
  • Inhibit protein synthesis
  • Effective against wide range G- (can affect G)
  • No absorbed orally
  • Can be toxic if accumulated
  • Eg gentamicin

24
Examples contin...
  • Chloramphenicol produced synthetically
  • Bacteriostatic not bacteriocidal
  • Good CSF infusion
  • Broad spectrum
  • Can affect bone marrow also lead to fatal
    aplastic anaemia
  • Oral and parenteral
  • Inhibits protein synthesis

25
Antibiotics contin...
  • Metronidazole (flagyl)
  • Main antibiotic for anaerobic infections
  • effective against protozoa eg Giardia
  • Produces toxic metabolites with low redox
    potential

26
Target sites for antibiotics
27
Antivirals
  • Amantidine (oral and parenteral)
  • Antiflu, useful in first 24-48hrs
  • Can be toxic
  • Acyclovir (oral /parenteral)
  • Anti HSV
  • Gangicyclovir more useful against VZV
  • Zidovudine (AZT) anti HIV
  • Tribovarin HSV and some RNA viruses

28
Antifungals
  • Azoles imidazole or trizole ring
  • Block fungal metabolic pathways
  • Topical and systemic
  • Eg fluconazole, micanazole, clotrimoxazole
  • Polyenes
  • Major drug for systemic fungal infection
  • Toxicity problems
  • Eg amphotericin B
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