- Joined
- Nov 19, 2020
You're assuming all the mRNA you get in the vaccine is intact. It isn't. I made a post early on in the vaccine thread in June debating that they know you're getting fragmented mRNA in an injection, they also have no idea if you end up transcribing the slightly degraded copies or the fragments. The European Medicines agency Explicitly states this when they are talking about concerns in the manufacturing processes. Sure, they can say they are giving you the locked spike conformation mRNA blueprints, but what about the strands that are slightly different? The fragments?It shouldn't, if it's locked in the prefusion conformation, but what if it is, somehow?
This was from the other vaccine info thread:
They have no idea what happens. They talk about how there are different "species" of mRNA that get created in the vaccine, these are slightly different from their target strand. What happens to the "fragmented species?"https://www.ema.europa.eu/en/docume...omirnaty-epar-public-assessment-report_en.pdf
They did mention the stability of the mRNA:
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They said it's likely the fragments don't get coded, but they aren't certain due to lack of data on this.
>We don't know there isn't any data on this...
