Finished week 6, starting week 7

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# Pre-Lab Project 6
A key concept from the video "mRNA Vaccines" is how mRNA style vaccines differ from traditional vaccines. While traditional vaccines can take years to develop, mRNA vaccines are quick to develop.
Traditional vaccines inject a weakened version of the actual virus, while mRNA vaccines only inject messenger RNA (mRNA). mRNA makes the body produce a small part of the virus instead of the whole virus. This way, the immune system can learn about the specific antigen and create corresponding antibodies.
Since traditional vaccines inject actual viruses or virus fragments, a full immune response can be triggered, causing an array of side effects. With mRNA vaccines, on the other hand, side-effects are minimized.
My question is why do the mRNA induced antigens not cause an immune response with side-effects?

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---
title: BIOL01113 Vocabulary Assignment 6
author: Aidan Sharpe
date: March 3rd, 2025
geometry: margin=1in
---
### Pathogen
Any disease-causing agent (virus, bacterium, prions).
### Virus
Non-cellular parasites made of organic molecules and nucleic acid. They bridge the gap between the living and non-living.
### Bacterium
Single-celled prokaryotes (cells without nuclei or any membrane-bound organelle).
### Infection
The invasion and disease of tissues in a host organism by a pathogen.
### Virulence
A measure of the disease-causing capability of a pathogen.
### Epidemic
An outbreak of a disease with higher-than average cases that is constrained to a specific region.
### Pandemic
An epidemic that spans many or all regions.
### Emerging Disease
A disease in a population for the first time.
### Antibiotic
A chemical substance that kills or stops the growth of bacteria.
### Antibiotic Resistance
A trait associated with some pathogens that allow it to survive in the presence of antibiotics.