202
General Microbiology II

Concepts of Immunology

Innate Host Defenses

Innate host defense factors are non-specific immune (resistance) factors that are present before infection ... they work all the time and effective against many different kinds of microbes

Adaptive host defenses ... How do our bodies prevent infectious diseases?

Adaptive host defense factors are immune factors that are triggered by antigens, substances produced by microbes during infection, and are specific for those pathogens to which one is exposed

Vaccines

Killed or attenuated (weakened) preparations containing microbial antigens that are used to stimulate immune responses without causing disease are called vaccines


Lecture Outline

Course Information

Laboratory

202 Home Page

Course Objectives

Sample Questions

Micro FAQs

Cool Micro Stuff

Course Evaluation

Extra Credit

Study Tips

Bugs'n'Drugs


© 1996-2008 John R. Stevenson. All Rights Reserved

Please
email questions and comments to:
John R. Stevenson, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Department of Microbiology
Miami University
Oxford, Ohio 45056
USA
This document was last modified on Friday, 04-Apr-2008 01:03:30 EDT