526-305 Medical and Applied Immunology

Credit Points

12.5

Coordinator

Dr A Brooks; Dr S Turner

Prerequisites

526-304 Principles of Immunology.

Semester

2 (view timetable)

Contact

36 lectures (three per week)

Subject Description

The subject provides an in-depth study of cell interactions in the immune response: natural and acquired immunity to bacteria, viruses and parasites; design of vaccines; immunodeficiency, including HIV/AIDS; immunopathology of infection; autoimmunity, its aetiology, pathogenesis and treatment; and current practice and future perspectives in transplantation and tumour immunology.

By the end of the subject students should be able to understand and discuss:

  • cell interactions in immunity as they relate to medical and applied aspects of immunology;

  • the mechanisms of natural and acquired immunity to bacteria, viruses and parasites, and mechanisms of evasion of these responses, and how this knowledge relates to vaccine design;

  • the problems of immunopathology and immunodeficiency in infection;

  • the aetiology, pathogenesis and treatment of autoimmunity;

  • the problems of transplantation and how they are overcome; and

  • the potential of immunotherapy and vaccines against cancer.

Students should have developed skills in analysing experimental evidence for immunological concepts.

They should appreciate the experimental basis of our knowledge of the immune response and how this knowledge can be extrapolated to practical applications.

Assessment

A 1-hour written examination held mid-semester (20%); a 3-hour written examination in the examination period (80%).

Prescribed Texts

  • C A Janeway et al, Immunobiology. 6th edn, 2004.


Status:                   Official 2007
Last Modified:            Tuesday October 31 22:21
SGML to HTML Conversion:  Information Division - CWIS (SDI)
Authorised by:            Academic Registrar
Enquiries:                http://unimelb.custhelp.com/

Valid CSS! Valid XHTML 1.0!