CONJUGATE VACCINES
- January 4, 2021
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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CONJUGATE VACCINES
Subject : Science & tech
Concept :
- A conjugate vaccine is a type of vaccine which combines a weak antigen with a strong antigen as a carrier so that the immune system has a stronger response to the weak antigen.
- Vaccines are used to prevent diseases by invoking an immune response to an antigen, the foreign part of a bacteria or virus that the immune system recognizes.
- This is usually accomplished with an attenuated or dead version of a pathogenic bacterium or virus in the vaccine, so that the immune system can recognize the antigen later in life.
- Many vaccines contain a single antigen that the body will recognize.
- However, the antigen of some pathogenic bacteria does not elicit a strong response from the immune system, so a vaccination against this weak antigen would not protect the person later in life. In this case, a conjugate vaccine is used in order to invoke an immune system response against the weak antigen. In a conjugate vaccine, the weak antigen is covalently attached to a strong antigen, thereby eliciting a stronger immunological response to the weak antigen. Most commonly, the weak antigen is a polysaccharide that is attached to strong protein antigen. However, protein and protein/protein conjugates have also been developed.
Approved conjugate vaccines
- The most commonly used conjugate vaccine is the Hib conjugate vaccine. Other pathogens that are combined in a conjugate vaccine to increase an immune response are Streptococcus pneumoniae and Neisseria meningitidis, both of which are conjugated to protein carriers like those used in the Hib conjugate vaccine
- Another conjugate vaccine is typhoid conjugate vaccine which may be more effective and prevents typhoid fever in many children under the age of five years.
- Pneumococcal Conjugate Vaccine (PCV) prevents pneumococcal disease. The vaccine is a mix of several bacteria of the pneumococci family, which are known to cause pneumonia.