Immunology: Immune System and Infectious Diseases

This course is part of Immunology: The Immune System and its Failures Specialization

Instructors: Malgorzata (Maggie) Trela +1 more

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What you'll learn

  •   In this course, you will go on a journey with our infectious disease experts and explore immune response to bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites.
  •   You will learn about mechanisms that some of these pathogens have developed to evade the immune response and survive in its human host.
  •   You will learn about some of these disease in more details, focussing on aspects of the immune response in the various phases of the infection.
  • Skills you'll gain

  •   Infectious Diseases
  •   Microbiology
  •   Molecular Biology
  •   Public Health
  •   Epidemiology
  •   Biology
  • There are 6 modules in this course

    Infectious diseases remain the leading cause of death worldwide. These are typically caused by bacteria (intra- and extracellular), viruses, fungi, parasites (worms/helminths) and prions. Under normal circumstance, the immune response orchestrates a robust protection against these pathogens using both molecular and cellular mechanisms. This usually leads to direct or indirect inactivation of the infectious agent, so the disease symptoms may not appear. However, numerous pathogens have devised immune evasion strategies, which allow them to play ‘hide and seek’ with our immune system. The avoidance of human natural defences may result in host colonisation by a pathogen and thus an infection. This can manifest as disease when the infectious agent replicates and inflicts damage. In this course, you will learn about the different types of pathogens, their confrontation with human immune system, and the dramatic consequences of their evasive strategies.

    Viral immunity and evasion

    Immunity against fungal infections

    Immune responses to Leishmania parasites

    Malaria infection and immunity

    Tuberculosis and human immunity

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