Thursday, February 27, 2014

Vaccine project outline for Lexi Graves (2/26/2014)

Hi again,

Here is a rough draft of an outline for our spring project.

Project: Explore vaccines (what they are made of and how they work).  We will make a vaccine, immunize mice, examine the immune response to this vaccine, and explore how this immune response leads to lasting immunity against a real disease (pathogen).

Face-to-face meetings:
**Danielle (and Lexi), please give me a few dates/times that will work for these monthly get-togethers.  My schedule is relatively flexible and open, so I found it almost overwhelming to email you with my list of available days :)  You can start with just March and/or April if you don't want to schedule out all four quite yet.

March: "4 Main Types of Vaccines."  Build the four types of vaccines with props to understand them in a hands-on manner.  Also create a REAL 'subunit' vaccine in lab - this is the type I work with.  I am going to try to get authorization for you to come with me into the animal facility to actually vaccinate mice for our experiment.  Location: either ELA or National Jewish Health (if mouse vaccinations are okayed).

April:  "Innate Immune Response to Vaccines."  We will do a mouse dissection lab to get familiar with mammalian anatomy and immune organs (where vaccines do their work!).  We will look at the early immune response to our vaccine.  Location: National Jewish Health (preferred) or ELA.

May:  "Adaptive Immune Response to Vaccines."  We will look at the later events of the immune response to our vaccine (antibodies that protect you!).  Location: TBD.

June (or earlier since ELA ends June 10th):  "How Effective are Vaccines at Protecting Us?"  We will explore how protective different vaccines are.  Let's focus on your interests in STDs and look at some examples of vaccines for those diseases.  Location: TBD.


I think the face-to-face meetings will determine what we do for weekly communications, so I can't really plan those yet.

Let me know if you have questions!
Laura

Laura Noges
PhD candidate, Integrated Department of Immunology
National Jewish Health, Kappler/Marrack Lab
lab 303-398-1465
laura.noges@ucdenver.edu

Intro to Vaccines #2 (2/23/2014)

Hi Lexi,

We are on our way to a project on vaccines!  Did the first videos make sense?  Here is another video I'd like you to watch:

"Antibiotics and Vaccines" ~12 minutes.
http://education-portal.com/academy/lesson/antibiotics-and-vaccines.html#lesson

We can Skype soon to talk about the videos and answer any questions you have.  Are you free to Skype on Thursday evening (after 5:30pm)?  No worries if not.

Reading is a little bit less hands-on, so please just take a look at this webpage to get a feeling for the main types of vaccines.  Don't worry too much if it's hard to understand and you want to just skim the text.  Either way, please only focus on the first four types: Live attenuated, inactivated, subunit, and toxoid.
http://www.niaid.nih.gov/topics/vaccines/understanding/pages/typesvaccines.aspx

I am still creating an outline for our spring project, but I still need to create a list of possible dates and then send the whole thing to you and your mom so we can begin to pencil things in!  I plan to send this to you tomorrow.

Cheers,
Laura

Intro to Vaccines (2/18/2014)

Hello Lexi (and Danielle),

I found two short videos on vaccines that will serve as a good introduction to our subject this spring!

Cheers,
Laura

Intro to Vaccines (2min):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SduMbjW2V9A

Science Behind the News (4min): INFLUENZA & FLU VACCINES
http://science360.gov/obj/video/0e61d589-8472-45ea-8596-3b4f5670425f/science-behind-news-influenza-flu-vaccines