mRNA VACCINES
CONTEXT:
- Recently, Nobel Price in physiology was awarded for their discoveries concerning nucleoside base modifications that enabled the development of effective mRNA vaccines against COVID-19.
WHAT ARE mRNA VACCINES ?
- mRNA, which stands for messenger RNA, is a form of nucleic acid which carries genetic information.
- Like other vaccines, the mRNA vaccine also attempts to activate the immune system to produce antibodies that help counter an infection from a live virus.
- However, while most vaccines use weakened or dead bacteria or viruses to evoke a response from the immune system, mRNA vaccines only introduce a piece of the genetic material that corresponds to a viral protein.
- This is usually a protein found on the membrane of the virus called spike protein.
- Therefore, the mRNA vaccine does not expose individuals to the virus itself.
HOW THESE VACCINES ARE DIFFERENT ?
- A piece of DNA must be converted into RNA for a cell to be able to manufacture the spike protein.
- While an mRNA vaccine might look like a more direct approach to getting the cell to produce the necessary proteins, mRNA is very fragile and will be shred apart at room temperature or by the body’s enzymes when injected.
- To preserve its integrity, the mRNA needs to be wrapped in a layer of oily lipids, or fat cells.
- One way to think of this is that an mRNA lipid unit most closely mimics how a virus presents itself to the body, except that it cannot replicate like one.
CHARACTERSTICS OF mRNA VACCINES :
- A challenge with mRNA vaccines is that they need to be frozen from 90 degree Celsius to 50 degree Celsius.
- They can be stored for up to two weeks in commercial freezers and need to be thawed at 2 degrees Celsius to 8 degrees Celsius at which they can remain for a month.
- But a major advantage of mRNA and DNA vaccines is that because they only need the genetic code, it is possible to update vaccines to emerging variants and use them for a variety of diseases.
- Viral vector vaccines, like Covishield, carry DNA wrapped in another virus, but mRNA are only a sheet of instructions to make spike proteins wrapped in a lipid (or a fat molecule) to keep it stable.
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