How do vaccines work? - Kelwalin Dhanasarnsombut

3,135,728 views ・ 2015-01-12

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In 1796, the scientist Edward Jenner
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injected material from a cowpox virus into an eight-year-old boy
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with a hunch that this would provide the protection needed
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to save people from deadly outbreaks of the related smallpox virus.
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It was a success.
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The eight-year-old was inoculated against the disease
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and this became the first ever vaccine.
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But why did it work?
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To understand how vaccines function,
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we need to know how the immune system defends us against contagious diseases
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in the first place.
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When foreign microbes invade us,
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the immune system triggers a series of responses
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in an attempt to identify and remove them from our bodies.
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The signs that this immune response is working
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are the coughing, sneezing, inflammation and fever we experience,
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which work to trap, deter and rid the body of threatening things, like bacteria.
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These innate immune responses also trigger our second line of defense,
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called adaptive immunity.
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Special cells called B cells and T cells are recruited to fight microbes,
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and also record information about them,
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creating a memory of what the invaders look like,
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and how best to fight them.
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This know-how becomes handy
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if the same pathogen invades the body again.
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But despite this smart response, there's still a risk involved.
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The body takes time to learn how to respond to pathogens
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and to build up these defenses.
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And even then,
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if a body is too weak or young to fight back when it's invaded,
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it might face very serious risk if the pathogen is particularly severe.
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But what if we could prepare the body's immune response,
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readying it before someone even got ill?
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This is where vaccines come in.
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Using the same principles that the body uses to defend itself,
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scientists use vaccines to trigger the body's adaptive immune system,
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without exposing humans to the full strength disease.
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This has resulted in many vaccines, which each work uniquely,
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separated into many different types.
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First, we have live attenuated vaccines.
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These are made of the pathogen itself but a much weaker and tamer version.
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Next, we have inactive vaccines, in which the pathogens have been killed.
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The weakening and inactivation in both types of vaccine
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ensures that pathogens don't develop into the full blown disease.
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But just like a disease, they trigger an immune response,
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teaching the body to recognize an attack
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by making a profile of pathogens in preparation.
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The downside is that live attenuated vaccines can be difficult to make,
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and because they're live and quite powerful,
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people with weaker immune systems can't have them,
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while inactive vaccines don't create long-lasting immunity.
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Another type, the subunit vaccine,
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is only made from one part of the pathogen, called an antigen,
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the ingredient that actually triggers the immune response.
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By even further isolating specific components of antigens,
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like proteins or polysaccharides,
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these vaccines can prompt specific responses.
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Scientists are now building a whole new range of vaccines
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called DNA vaccines.
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For this variety, they isolate the very genes that make the specific antigens
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the body needs to trigger its immune response to specific pathogens.
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When injected into the human body,
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those genes instruct cells in the body to make the antigens.
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This causes a stronger immune response,
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and prepares the body for any future threats,
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and because the vaccine only includes specific genetic material,
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it doesn't contain any other ingredients from the rest of the pathogen
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that could develop into the disease and harm the patient.
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If these vaccines become a success,
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we might be able to build more effective treatments
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for invasive pathogens in years to come.
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Just like Edward Jenner's amazing discovery
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spurred on modern medicine all those decades ago,
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continuing the development of vaccines
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might even allow us to treat diseases like HIV,
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malaria,
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or Ebola, one day.
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