Types of vaccines, part 1: live vaccines

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024

Комментарии • 18

  • @nadapenny8592
    @nadapenny8592 Год назад +1

    Finally someone else with the same lisp!!! Love it. Thanks for informing the world.

  • @damon1711
    @damon1711 3 года назад +4

    I've looked all over for this answer. Do the live attenuated vaccines still have adjuvants in them?

    • @JoeDeMasiScience
      @JoeDeMasiScience  3 года назад +1

      Typically no, since they are still infectious but just don’t cause disease. They provoke an immune response on their own, no need to add adjuvant.

  • @decker5202
    @decker5202 3 года назад +3

    Hello, great video. How are live vaccines produced for consumers in such a way that that no further mutations occur?

    • @pedroakjr2371
      @pedroakjr2371 3 года назад +2

      First of all I'd assume there's always a risk of that happening, but that would be VERY rare. Also, the vaccines are tested before being sent to the public so the scientists would always be able to notice if something was wrong.
      It would be better to look for the explanation of a specialist though.

  • @bonk8594
    @bonk8594 3 года назад +1

    I heard that tetanus vaccine has dna-methylation will this change my dna ? And what kind of vaccine is the tetanus vaccine ?

  • @liliroquelin
    @liliroquelin 3 года назад +1

    Hello Professor - What do you think about the idea that some people in the media that says “live vaccines are better because it goes out of the body once the immune response is done as the RNA/DNA vaccines do not, they stay in the body”. I don’t see how they could “stay in the body”....? What would you reply to this?

    • @JoeDeMasiScience
      @JoeDeMasiScience  3 года назад +1

      Live vaccines are really just ways to deliver DNA or RNA into cells. A live virus used in any vaccine just allows the DNA or RNA to enter cells using the virus's natural entry mechanism. With DNA/RNA vaccines, the DNA/RNA is usually coated with lipids, allow fusion and entry into cells. Either way, the DNA or RNA does not "stay in the body" forever.

    • @liliroquelin
      @liliroquelin 3 года назад +1

      Thank you! That’s what I thought I didn’t know how to explain it.

    • @pedroakjr2371
      @pedroakjr2371 3 года назад

      @@JoeDeMasiScience I was reading that there was a concern that since DNA vaccines go into the nucleus to producer mRNA they could mix with the chromosomes. Is that so?

  • @pnpark
    @pnpark 3 года назад

    Do all of these types of vaccines give the same immune response level, the same group of immune cells equally? Are the inactive and subunit vaccines the ones that provoke the least immune response because they don’t mimic infection, they don’t get inside the cells, (only after phygocytosis)?

  • @MyRefugeStrength
    @MyRefugeStrength 3 года назад

    Isn't our immune system already created to do this work without being tricked or force compromised into doing as it knows to do when it recognizes a threat?

  • @pnpark
    @pnpark 3 года назад +1

    Great video well explained. Are you a immunology professor?

    • @JoeDeMasiScience
      @JoeDeMasiScience  3 года назад +2

      Yes I have been teaching immunology for over a decade. These are the videos that I create for my students.

    • @liliroquelin
      @liliroquelin 3 года назад

      What do you think about people in the media that say “live vaccines are better because it goes out of the body once the immune response is done as the RNA/DNA vaccines do not, they stay in the body”. I don’t see how they could “stay in the body”.

    • @ania7930
      @ania7930 3 года назад

      @@liliroquelin I think I may provide an answer to that. The RNA is an unstable molecule and braks down within anything from 15 minutes to some hours in the body. This is why these vaccines need to be kept in such low temperatures. As for the clean-up of this broken mess, our body must have an effective system for that since our own cells use RNA themselves all the time. Whenever information from our own DNA is needed, an mRNA copy is made and used instead of using the invaluable DNA. Then we're left with the mRNA which didn't get absorbed into the cells, lipid capsules within which the mRNA is placed and the fluid within which those are suspended... I don't have any info on how this is cleaned up, but my guess would be phagocytes. And the sugar probably just gets eaten up. There's a bit of sugar too. For details let's wait for an actual expert :)

    • @nadapenny8592
      @nadapenny8592 Год назад +1

      @@ania7930 So, the way I understand that, metaphorically speaking, instead of destroying or losing the originals, the body faxes over a copy to where it needs to be...