The external viral proteins of the HPV vaccine.
The administration of a vaccine stimulates the body to produce a longer lasting type of immunity called "adaptive immunity." This type of immunity involves the production of specific antibodies and memory cells that provide long-term protection against the targeted pathogen.
vaccine
The best answer would be Antibodies; however, these do not chemically "attack" viruses or bacteria. More accurately, antibodies recognize various germs and allow the various cell types of your immune system to attack and destroy these germs directly. For more info on how this works see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_immune_system
No, antibodies are produced by your body as an immune response to an outside threat. A vaccine is--or used to be--just a weakened outside threat introduced internally so that your body may develop immunity to it. Pass on the mercury and aluminum, though, thanks.
A vaccine stimulates the body to produce antibodies against a specific disease causing pathogen. This makes the body able to fight off that disease.
The word 'vaccine' is a noun, a word for a substance used to stimulate the production of antibodies and provide immunity against a disease; a word for a thing.
a vaccine is a little dose of the disease that your body can handle. when the body is injected with it it will form antibodies that will be ready for the real disease when it comes while the serum is the antibodies themselves.
No, a flu vaccine triggers our bodies to make our own antibodies. The vaccine includes dead or weakened viruses that can't make us sick, but they will cause the immune response that creates the correct antibodies.
Antibodies
From serum it is possible to make vaccine (because it contains Antibodies)
Antibodies.
white blood cells treat the vaccine as an intruder and make antibodies to fight it.