Editing 2406: Viral Vector Immunity

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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
This comic is another in a [[:Category:COVID-19|series of comics]] related to the {{w|COVID-19 pandemic}}. This comic is the third of five releases, following [[2402: Into My Veins]] and [[2404: First Thing]], which reference the new {{w|COVID-19 vaccine}}. It was released on New Years day, without being a [[:Category:New Year|New Year comic]]. This had not happened since 2010.
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{{incomplete|Created by a SENTIENT WOODEN HORSE. Please mention here why this explanation isn't complete. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
  
The comic attempts to explain a virus vector vaccine and one way it can fail, using the story of the {{w|Trojan Horse}} as an analogy. Note that neither the Pfizer/BioNTech nor Moderna vaccines are virus vector vaccines, using lipid nanoparticles for delivery rather than viruses.
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This comic references the story of the {{w|Trojan Horse}}.
  
A vaccine is a way to familiarize a host's immune system with a pathogen without actually causing the host to fall ill.  There are many types of vaccines that have been developed, all of which are ways to present a significant segment of a pathogen's molecular structure to the host body, so that the immune system recognizes the pathogen and mounts an immune response faster when a real infection happens.
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The comic attempts to explain the methodology of a vector virus vaccine, and the failure of the specific methodology.
  
A {{w|viral vector}} is a tool used by molecular biologists to deliver genetic materials into cells.
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A vaccine is a way to familiarise a host's immune system with a pathogen without actually causing the host to fall ill with the associated illness.
  
A viral vector vaccine, also known as a live vector vaccine, uses a modified virus, different from the pathogen being immunized against, as a carrier to deliver a molecular payload into the host body. This modified virus is called the vector because it is the method of delivery of a piece of the pathogen's genetic code.  If the recipient has a strong immune response to the vector itself (i.e., the proteins making up the surface of the vector virus), the immunization may be less effective because the vector virus, and hence its payload of viral genetic material, will be destroyed before they can enter the host's cells.  It is to some degree a dice roll, with regard to whether some recipients will already be immune to a vector.
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There are many types of vaccines that have been developed over time, all of which are ways to present a significant segment of a viral molecular structure to the host body, so that the immune system recognises the virus and mounts an immune response faster when a real infection happens.
  
For example, a modified (to be harmless) cold virus can be used to deliver genetic material (RNA or DNA) of another virus into the patient's cells. The cells are induced to manufacture protein found in the pathogenic protein, which the patient's immune system detects and reacts to. That way the immune system recognizes the pathogenic virus without actually being infected with it, which decreases the time needed to react to a real infection. Any patients whose immune systems recognize the modified cold virus (the vector), and destroy it rapidly, won't get the full intended benefit of creating a strong immune response to the second virus (the payload inside).
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A viral vector vaccine uses a modified virus, usually different to the pathogen being immunised against, to deliver a molecular payload into the host body. This modified virus is called the vector virus because it is the method of delivery of the molecular piece of the pathogen virus.
  
The comic represents this idea with the Trojan horse being the vector, carrying a payload of Greek soldiers into the cell, as represented by the City of Troy. In the original Trojan Horse story, Greek soldiers hid inside a statue of a horse which the Trojans were told was a gift to Athena; the Trojans brought it within their walls (which the Greek army had failed to penetrate in an extended siege), allowing the soldiers in the horse to undermine the city's defenses and let in the rest of their army to take the city. Note: In a viral vector vaccine, the payload inside the vector works to the benefit of the person receiving the vaccine - opposite to the soldiers inside the Trojan horse, who had only malice in mind for the city receiving the "gift" horse.
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For example, a modified (to be harmless) cold virus can be used to deliver an (harmless) outer segment of another virus into the body. The ability of the vector virus to sneak into the host body and inject itself into the cell's reproductive system is used to trick the body into producing numerous copies of the recognisable piece of the other virus. That way the immune system recognises the molecular segment of the other virus without actually being infected with that virus, which tends to significantly increase recognition time after a real infection and therefore speeds up recovery.
  
In the comic the warriors, rather than finding the wooden horse a benign object, recognize the shape of the delivery vehicle (the Trojan horse) as being similar to an animal that trampled one of their own earlier and therefore refuse it entry. An amusing point here is that they are not as such surprised at the arrival of a wooden vehicle at their doorstep, rather that its shape resembling an animal they have found threatening before, which is similar to how simple in its judgements the immune system can be. (In addition, although the warriors suggest pushing the wooden horse into a gorge, there are no gorges very close to Troy, which is situated close to the sea on the [https://www.livius.org/articles/place/troy/troy-5/ Plain of Troy].)
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The comic represents this idea with the Trojan horse being the (in this case) harmless vector virus, carrying, contrary to the traditional story, a beneficial payload into the cell.
  
The title text is a further riff on this theme, playing on an advertising campaign for freeze dried coffee.  In the advertisements a narrator would claim to have secretly replaced fresh brewed coffee with that made from freeze dried to see if subjects could tell the difference, the contents of the coffee cup being the payload and the narrator the virus vector.  The test subject's use of a sword relates the situation back to the Trojan scenario of the panel.
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The failure of the virus vector method sometimes results from the body mounting an immune response to the vector itself because it recognises its own molecular structure, therefore preventing the delivery of the payload and reducing the efficacy of the vaccine. In the comic the warriors recognise the shape of the delivery vehicle (the Trojan horse) as being similar to an animal that trampled one of their own earlier and therefore refuse it entry. An amusing point here is that they are not as such surprised at the arrival of a wooden vehicle at their doorstep, rather that its shape resembling an animal they have found threatening before, which is similar to how simple in its judgements the immune system can be.
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The title text is a further riff on this theme, with the contents of the coffee cup being the payload and the cup itself the virus vector.
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
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{{incomplete transcript|Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
 
:[A large wooden horse statue on wheels stands before a city wall, upon which are standing several warriors who are shouting and brandishing spears.]
 
:[A large wooden horse statue on wheels stands before a city wall, upon which are standing several warriors who are shouting and brandishing spears.]
 
:Warrior 1: Look! It's a statue of that horrible animal that trampled Steve!
 
:Warrior 1: Look! It's a statue of that horrible animal that trampled Steve!
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:Warrior 4: Push it into the gorge!
 
:Warrior 4: Push it into the gorge!
  
:[Caption below the panel:]
 
 
:How vaccine failure due to viral vector immunity works
 
:How vaccine failure due to viral vector immunity works
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
{{comic discussion}}
 
[[Category:COVID-19]]
 
[[Category:COVID-19]]
[[Category:COVID-19 vaccine]]
 
[[Category:Biology]]
 

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