2. Outline the strategies for developing vaccines, and give specific examples for each method. By what means are microorganisms attenuated? 3. What are the advantages and disadvantages of a killed vaccine; a live, attenuated vaccine; a subunit vaccine; a recombinant vaccine; and a DNA vaccine? Use an outline to explain how an inoculation with tetanus toxoid will protect a person the next time he or she steps on a dirty piece of glass. 4. Describe the concept of herd immunity. 5. What is the basis of serology and serological
testing? 6. What does seropositivity mean? 7. Explain how agglutination and precipitation reactions are alike. In what ways are they different? 8. What is meant by complement fixation? What are
cytolysins? 9. Explain the differences between direct and
indirect procedures in serological or immunoassay tests How does a positive reaction in an ELISA test appear? 10. Briefly describe the principles and give an example of the use of a specific test using immunoelectrophoresis, Western blot, complement fixation, fluorescence testing (direct and indirect), and immunoassays (direct and indirect ELISA). Explain a rapid microscopic method for differentiating T cells from B cells.
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