Title: BIOE 301 Lecture Nine
1BIOE 301 Lecture Nine
2BIOE 301 Lecture 9
- WARM-UP
- What type of immune defense is involved in each
of the following - A flu virus infects your cells
- You step on a rusty nail and it pierces your skin
- Youre exposed to chicken pox (you already had it
as a kid)
3Summary of Lecture 8
- Pathogens Bacteria and Virus
- Levels of Immunity
- Barriers ? First line of defense
- Innate ? Inflammation
- Phagocytes
- Complement
- Adaptive ? Immunologic memory
- Antibody mediated immunity
- Cell mediated immunity ? Pathogens within cells
4Q3 How can technology solve health care
problems?
- CS1 Prevention of infectious disease
5Outline
- Pathogens How They Cause Disease
- The Immune System How We Fight Disease
- How Vaccines Work
- The Power of Vaccines Childhood Illnesses
- Designing a New Vaccine HIV/AIDS
6Roadmap of CS 1
- Science
- Organisms that cause disease
- Immunity
- Engineering
- How to make a vaccine
- Vaccines From idea to product
- Societal Impact
- Health and economics
- Ethics of clinical trials
- Developed world/Developing world
7Influenza Pandemic
- CDC Public Service Announcement
- http//www.pandemicflu.gov/
- 1918-19 Spanish Flu
- 50-100 million deaths
- 1957-58 Asian Flu
- 1-4 million deaths
- 1968-69 Hong Kong Flu
- 750,000 deaths
www.cdc.gov
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandemic
8Viruses
- Three basic problems each must solve
- How to reproduce inside a human cell
- How to spread from one person to another
- Inhale
- Eat
- During birth
- Intimate physical contact
- How to evade the immune system
http//students.washington.edu/grant/random/sneeze
.jpg
9Influenza
- Viral Reproduction - 1
- Must get inside human cell to use cells
biosynthetic machinery - Influenza virus binds to cell receptor
- Induces receptor mediated endocytosis
10Influenza
- Viral Reproduction - 2
- pH slowly reduced in endosome, due to proton pump
in membrane - Virus releases its single stranded RNA and
polymerase proteins - RNA segments and polymerase proteins enter
nucleus of infected cell - Cell begins to make many copies of the viral RNA
and viral coat proteins
11Influenza
- Viral Reproduction - 3
- New viral particles exit nucleus and bud from
cell - Viral polymerase proteins dont proofread
reproduction - Nearly every virus produced in an influenza
infected cell is a mutant
12Influenza
- Viral Spread
- Infected person sneezes or coughs
- Micro-droplets containing viral particles inhaled
by another person - Penetrates epithelial cells lining respiratory
tract - Influenza kills cells that it infects
- Can only cause acute infections
- Cannot establish latent or chronic infections
- How does it evade immune extinction?
- Antigenic drift
- Caused by point mutations
- http//www.cdc.gov/flu/weekly/usmap.htm
13Influenza
- How does the virus cause symptoms?
- Cells of respiratory tract are killed by virus or
immune system - Resulting inflammation triggers cough reflex to
clear airways of foreign invaders - Influenza infection results in production of
large quantities of interferon - Interferon protein that
fights infection, but also causes
Fever Muscle aches Headaches Fatigue
14Genetic Shift and Flu Pandemics
- Genetic Shift
- Animals co-infected by different strains of virus
- Viral gene segments randomly reassociate
- Reassortment of virus segments from birds, pigs,
etc is source of new strains that infect humans - How does this happen?
- Virus shed in bird feces, gets into pigs'
drinking water - Humans handle and/or cough on the pig
- New virus - segments from humans, birds pigs
- China
- Breeding ground for new influenzas strains
- Proximity of humans, pigs, and ducks in China
- Asian flu, Hong Kong flu, etc.
- http//www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/facts.htm
15Why do we need vaccines?
Pathogen Offense Immune System
Defense Vaccines ? Stealing the
playbook
16Vaccination
- Vaccination
- Practice of artificially inducing immunity
- Goal of vaccination
- Stimulate both cell mediated and antibody
mediated immunity that will protect the
vaccinated person against future exposure to
pathogen - Want the vaccine to have
- Maximum realism
- Minimum danger
17What is needed to make memory cells?
- Memory B Cells Memory Helper T Cells
- B and T cell receptors must see virus or viral
debris - Memory Killer T Cells
- Antigen Presenting Cells must be infected with
virus
18History of Vaccination
- Seventh Century
- Indian Buddhists drank snake venom to induce
immunity (through toxoid effect) - 1700s
- Variolation against smallpox
19History of Vaccination
- 1798 - Edward Jenner noted
- Smallpox and Cowpox
- Milkmaids frequently contracted cowpox which
caused lesions similar to that smallpox - Milkmaids who had cowpox almost never got
smallpox - Jenners (unethical) experiment
- Collected pus from cowpox sores
- Injected cowpox pus into boy named James Phipps
- Then injected Phipps with pus from smallpox sores
- Phipps did not contract smallpox
- First to introduce large scale, systematic
immunization against smallpox
20History of Vaccination
- 1885 Attenuation
- Louis Pasteur - first vaccine against rabies
- Early 1900s Toxoids
- Diphtheria, tetanus
- 1936
- Influenza
- 1950s Tissue Culture
- Polio (Nobel Prize for Enders, Robbins, Weller)
- 1960s
- Measles, Mumps, Rubella
21Types of Vaccines
- Non-infectious vaccines
- Flu, plague
- DTaP, Pneumococcus
- Live, attenuated bacterial or viral vaccines
- Chicken Pox, MMR
- Carrier Vaccines
- DNA Vaccines
- Experimental
22Non-infectious vaccines
- Killed bacterial or inactivated viral vaccines
- Treat pathogen with chemicals (like formaldehyde)
- Impossible to guarantee that you have killed all
the pathogen - Salk (inactivated) Polio vaccine, rabies vaccine
- Subunit vaccines
- Use part of pathogen OR
- Use genetic engineering to manufacture pathogen
protein - No danger of infection
- Hepatitis A B, Haemophilus influenza type b,
pneumonoccocal conjugate vaccines - Toxoid vaccines
- Bacterial toxins that have been made harmless
- Diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccines
- This approach will make memory B cells and memory
helper T cells, but NOT memory killer T cells - Booster vaccines usually required
23Live, attenuated vaccines
- Grow pathogen in host cells in cell culture
- Produces mutations which
- Weaken pathogen so it cannot produce disease in
healthy people - Pathogen still produces strong immune response
that protects against future infection - This approach makes memory B cells, memory helper
T cells, AND memory killer T cells - Usually provide life-long immunity
- Ex. Sabin Polio vaccine (oral Polio)
- Measles, mumps, rubella, varicella vaccines
- Why is this a problem for immuno-compromised
host?
24Cell culture allows development of live,
attenuated vaccine
- Grow cells
- Removed from tissue
- In vitro (in glass)
- By supplying nutrients and other factors
- Specific O2 and CO2 (pH level)
- Glucose, ions
- Serum from blood proteins
25Passaging Cells
26Carrier Vaccines
- Use virus or bacterium that does not cause
disease to carry viral genes to APCs - e.g. vaccinia for Smallpox vaccine
- http//www.bt.cdc.gov/agent/smallpox/vaccination/f
acts.asp - This approach makes memory B cells, memory helper
T cells, AND memory killer T cells - Does not pose danger of real infection
- Immuno-compromised individuals can get infection
from carrier - Carrier must be one that individuals are not
already immune to - Why cant you make a booster vaccine with carrier?
27DNA Vaccines
- DNA injections can produce memory B cells and
memory T killer cells - Reasons are not fully understood
- Make a DNA vaccine from a few viral genes
- No danger that it would cause infection
28Types of Vaccines
- Non-infectious vaccines
- No danger of infection
- -- Does not stimulate cell mediated immunity
- -- Usually need booster vaccines
- Live, attenuated bacterial or viral vaccines
- Makes memory B cells, memory helper T cells,
AND memory killer T cells - Usually provides life-long immunity
- -- Can produce disease in immuno-compromised host
- Carrier Vaccines
- Makes memory B cells, memory helper T cells,
AND memory killer T cells - Does not pose danger of real infection
- - Immuno-compromised individuals can get
infection from carrier - DNA Vaccines
- Experimental
29Effectiveness of Vaccines
- Vaccination Effectiveness
- About 1-2 of every 20 people immunized will not
have an adequate immune response to a vaccine - Herd Immunity
- Vaccinated people have antibodies against a
pathogen - They are much less likely to transmit that germ
to other people - Even people that have not been vaccinated are
protected - About 95 of community must be vaccinated to
achieve herd immunity - Does not provide protection against
non-contagious diseases eg tetanus
30Your Flu Shot
- If you got your flu shot this season, and skip it
next season, you are more likely to get the flu
next seasonWhy?
31Vaccines
32Vaccine Testing
- Laboratory testing
- Animal Model
- Animal must be susceptible to infection by agent
against which vaccine is directed - Animal should develop same symptoms as humans
33Vaccine Testing
- Human Trials
- Phase I
- Small number of volunteers (20-100)
- Usually healthy adults
- Last few months
- Determine vaccine dosages that produce levels of
memory B or T cells that are likely to be
protective - Evaluate side effects at these dosages
- FDA must approve the vaccine as an
Investigational New Drug (IND) - NPR Story Ebola Vaccine Trials
- http//www.npr.org/rundowns/segment.php?wfId15132
30
34Vaccine Testing
- Human Trials
- Phase II
- Larger number of volunteers (several hundred)
- Last few months to few years
- Controlled study, with some volunteers receiving
- Vaccine
- Placebo (or existing vaccine)
- Endpoints Effectiveness, safety
35Vaccine Testing
- Human Trials
- Phase III
- Large number of volunteers (several hundred to
several thousand) - Last years
- Controlled double blind study, with some
volunteers receiving - Vaccine
- Placebo (or existing vaccine)
- Neither patients nor physicians know which was
given
36Vaccine Testing
- Role of the FDA
- Licensure by FDA required before a company can
market the vaccine (about a decade) - Each batch of vaccine must be tested for safety,
potency, purity and sample lot must be sent to
FDA - Post-licensure surveillance
- Doctors must report adverse reactions after
vaccination to FDA and CDC - Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS)
- As many as 12,000 reports per year, 2,000 serious
- Most are unrelated to the vaccine
37Vaccine Testing
- Recommendations by health departments and expert
physician groups - When should vaccine be used
- Who should receive it
- Weigh risks and benefits of the vaccine, costs
of vaccination - Legislation
- States determine which vaccines are required by
law - All 50 states have school immunization laws
- Can be exempted based on
- Medical reasons (50 states)
- Religious reasons (48 states)
- Philosophical reasons (15 states)
38Vaccine Schedule
- Birth
- Hepatitis B
- 2 Months
- DTap 1
- Polio 1
- Hib 1
- Hepatits B 2
- Pneumococcus 1
- 4 months
- DTaP 2
- Polio 2
- Hib 2
- Pneumococcus 2
- 6 months
- DTaP 3
- Hib 3
- Pneumococcus 3
- 12 months
- MMR 1
- Varicella
- 15 months
- Hib 4
- Polio 3
- Hepatitis B 3
- Pneumococcus 4
- DTap 4
- 4-6 years
- MMR 2
- Polio 4
- DTaP 5
- 11-12 years
- Tetanus, Diphtheria
By age two 20 shots!! Single visit Up to 5
shots!!
http//www.christianpoint.org/inspiration/images/c
rying_baby.jpg
39Recommended Vaccine Schedule
40History of the Rotavirus Vaccine
- Withdrawn from the market after post-licensure
surveillance indicated small number of adverse
effects
http//www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story
Id3262013 http//www.npr.org/templates/story/stor
y.php?storyId5126636
41Vaccines
42Effects of Vaccination in US
Disease Max of Cases Cases in 2000 D
Diphtheria 206,929 (1921) 2 -99.99
Measles 894,134 (1941) 63 -99.99
Mumps 152,209 (1968) 315 -99.80
Pertussis 265,269 (1952) 6,755 -97.73
Polio 21,269 (1952) 0 -100
Rubella 57,686 (1969) 152 -99.84
Tetanus 1,560 (1923) 26 -98.44
HiB 20,000 (1984) 1,212 - 93.14
Hep B 26,611 (1985) 6,646 -75.03
43Effects of Vaccination
- Smallpox
- First human disease eradicated from the face of
the earth by a global immunization campaign - 1974
- Only 5 of the worlds children received 6
vaccines recommended by WHO - 1994
- gt80 of the worlds children receive basic
vaccines - Each year 3 million lives saved
44Smallpox
- One of worlds deadliest diseases
- Vaccine available in early 1800s
- Difficult to keep vaccine viable enough to
deliver in developing world - Elimination of smallpox
- 1950 stable, freeze dried vaccine
- 1950 Goal ? Eradicate smallpox from western
hemisphere - 1967 Goal achieved except for Brazil
- 1959 Goal ? Eradicate smallpox from globe
- Little progress made until 1967 when resources
dedicated, 10-15 million cases per year at this
time - Strategies
- Vaccinate 80 of population
- Surveillance and containment of outbreaks
- May 8, 1980 world certified as smallpox free
45Childhood Immunization
- 1977
- Goal to immunize at least 80 of worlds children
against six antigens by 1990 - Measles
- Diphtheria
- Pertussis
- Tetanus
- Polio
- Tuberculosis
46Measles
Pertussis
47Diptheria
48http//www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story
Id849775
http//www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story
Id3870193
49Vaccines
50What Vaccines are needed?
- The big three
- HIV
- Malaria
- Tuberculosis
51Summary of Lecture 9
- How do vaccines work?
- Stimulate immunity without causing disease
- How are vaccines made?
- Non-infectious vaccines
- Live, attenuated bacterial or viral vaccines
- Carrier Vaccines
- DNA Vaccines
- How are vaccines tested?
- Lab/Animal testing
- Phase I-III human testing
- Post-licensure surveillance
- Impact of vaccines
52- Turn in Project Task 2 today
- Next Time
- HW 5 due on 2/13/07
- HIV/AIDS vaccine development
53To learn more
- Influenza
- http//www.cdc.gov/mmwr/mguide_flu.html
- Avian Flu
- http//www.cdc.gov/flu/avian/
- http//www.pandemicflu.gov/
- Original Antigenic Sin
- http//www.rice.edu/sallyport/2003/fall/sallyport/
flu.html - An overview of vaccines
- http//www.accessexcellence.org/AE/AEC/CC/vaccines
_how_why.html