Science New Self Replicating “sa-mRNA Vaccine” Approved For Mass Production - Because "self replicating" just fills you with confidence.

Self-copying RNA vaccine wins first full approval: what’s next?​

Researchers look ahead to the potential uses and benefits of a technology that has been more than 20 years in the making.

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Self-amplifying RNA vaccines will add to the arsenal of conventional messenger RNA jabs.
Credit: Pascal Pochard-Casabianca/AFP via Getty


The approval of yet another RNA-based vaccine for COVID-19 might not seem momentous. But the endorsement last week by Japanese authorities of a jab against SARS-CoV-2 constructed using a form of RNA that can make copies of itself inside cells — the first ‘self-amplifying’ RNA (saRNA) granted full regulatory approval anywhere in the world — marks a pivotal advance.

The new vaccine platform could provide potent defence against various infectious diseases and cancers. And because it could be used at a lower dose, it might have fewer side effects than other messenger RNA (mRNA) treatments have.

When used as a booster in clinical testing, the newly authorized vaccine, ARCT-154 — developed by Arcturus Therapeutics in San Diego, California, and its partner CSL, a biotechnology firm headquartered in Melbourne, Australia — triggered higher levels of virus-fighting antibodies that circulated the body for longer than did a standard mRNA COVID-19 vaccine.

Researchers have been trying to make saRNA vaccines a reality for more than 20 years. “Being the first to bring an approval for this platform is pretty huge,” says Roberta Duncan, RNA-programme leader at CSL and vice-chair of the Alliance for mRNA Medicines, an advocacy organization that launched last month to advance the sector’s policy priorities.

“It’s incredibly validating to the field,” says Nathaniel Wang, chief executive and co-founder of Replicate Bioscience in San Diego, California, a company that develops saRNA vaccines. He anticipates that, with continuing advancements, saRNA technology will increasingly replace conventional mRNA in a diverse array of therapeutic contexts. “It has more versatility in its potential,” Wang says.

Amped up​

That versatility emerges from its unique features.

Conventional mRNA-based COVID-19 shots consist mainly of the genetic instructions for a viral protein that are surrounded by regulatory sequences. A cell’s machinery produces the protein for as long as these instructions persist, and that protein — known as an antigen — stimulates an immune response. By contrast, saRNA jabs go a step further by integrating the genes needed for the replication and synthesis of the antigen-encoding RNA, effectively establishing a biological printing press for fabricating the vaccine inside cells (see ‘Vaccine strategies compared’).

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Credit: Nik Spencer/Nature, adapted from “How COVID unlocked the power of RNA vaccines”

In the case of ARCT-154, the antigen is a surface protein called spike that is expressed by SARS-CoV-2. The replication machinery is taken from a naturally occurring virus, a mosquito-borne pathogen known as Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus that causes deadly brain swelling in horses and humans. Notably, scientists at Arcturus have removed key genes from the viral sequence backbone, thus rendering the system non-infectious and safe for use in humans.

People often think that the saRNA vaccine platform is simply a variation on conventional mRNA shots, “but in practice it’s really not”, says Anna Blakney, a bioengineer who studies the technology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, Canada. “saRNA is a totally different beast.”

Because of its virus-like nature, saRNA interacts with the immune system in distinctive ways that could prove beneficial across a range of disease scenarios. When it comes to preventing infections, for instance, its self-amplifying capabilities could enable the use of lower vaccine doses.

ARCT-154 requires one-tenth to one-sixth as much vaccine per person as other RNA-based COVID-19 booster jabs. Reducing the amount of vaccine administered in each injection should result in lower production costs. And although the side-effect profile of ARCT-154 seems comparable to that of a conventional mRNA shot1, it is conceivable that the benefits of the platform’s smaller doses will help to mitigate the severity of aches, fevers, chills and other loathsome symptoms collectively known as reactogenicity.

These unpleasant reactions remain a considerable impediment for people to take mRNA-based vaccines. Consider the seasonal influenza vaccine. Existing jabs that use older vaccine technology cause only mild reactions. At present, several conventional mRNA-based flu jabs are progressing through clinical trials and these are showing promising signs of eliciting more protective antibodies than existing shots. Yet their side-effect profiles still leave room for improvement, notes Christian Mandl, co-founder and chief scientific officer of Tiba Biotech in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The saRNA vaccines’ “lower dose could help to solve some of the reactogenicity issues”, he says.

Big shot​

The saRNA vaccine platform does have some downsides. Because of the added genetic instructions, the jabs tend to contain longer sequences — typically at least three times the length of what is used in conventional mRNA shots — which adds complexity to the manufacturing process.

They also engage with the immune system in intricate ways — for example, by forming replication intermediates that help to stimulate beneficial immune-signaling pathways. However, excessive stimulation can backfire, including when the vaccine prompts the immune system to block RNA replication, thereby nullifying its benefits.

It is a delicate needle to thread, says Niek Sanders, a gene-therapy researcher at Ghent University in Belgium and a scientific founder of Ziphius Vaccines, a company in Merelbeke, Belgium, that develops saRNA-based medicines. “You have to find the optimal dose of the self-amplifying RNA in combination with the right delivery system.”

The biotech industry has tried for decades to get the balance right. From 2003 to 2010, for instance, a company called AlphaVax, based in Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, conducted trials of saRNA vaccine candidates for a range of infectious diseases and cancers. AlphaVax ultimately wound down for “business reasons” after failing to secure further investment, says the firm’s co-founder Jonathan Smith, who continues to develop saRNA vaccines as the chief scientific officer of VLP Therapeutics in Gaithersburg, Maryland.

The fruits of fortitude​

With approval for ARCT-154 secured in Japan, its developers are now seeking authorization in Europe; a regulatory decision is expected next year.

“This will hopefully begin to put a nail in the coffin of the idea that self-amplifying RNA is not a viable platform,” says Corey Casper, president and chief executive of the Access to Advanced Health Institute in Seattle, Washington. (Another saRNA jab for COVID-19 was approved on an emergency-use basis in India last year; however, that vaccine’s less-impressive clinical data, the provisional nature of the product’s authorization, and India’s less stringent regulatory requirements have all led industry insiders to consider ARCT-154’s approval to be the field’s true watershed moment.)

More than a dozen saRNA vaccine candidates are currently in clinical trials for a range of applications — from shots for shingles and the flu to therapeutic vaccines for cancer. But researchers are already considering the platform’s broader applications.

For example, the technology might one day be used to produce therapeutic proteins inside the body, says Mark Grinstaff, a biochemist at Boston University in Massachusetts and a co-founder of Keylicon Biosciences in Brookline, Massachusetts.

Manufacturing plants currently use bioreactors to produce such proteins, which are then injected into people who need the treatment. Over the past few months, two independent groups — one involving Smith’s team at VLP Therapeutics, the other involving Grinstaff and his colleagues at Boston University — have posted preprints that describe how altering the chemical backbone of saRNA can diminish the technology’s immune-triggering effects in a positive way. Similar chemical tweaks are commonly used in conventional mRNA vaccines, but not in ARCT-154 or most other saRNA products.

“People are working pretty hard” to expand the platform’s scope, says Smith. “There are some inherent advantages of saRNA — if we’re smart enough to take advantage of them.”

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-023-03859-w (Archive)
 
It is possible for BOTH the government to be evil and for you to be a craven vaccine enabling tard at the same time.

So proud of you for drawing a line at the boosters though! Amazing how they didn't fire you for that... Weird how that works.

>join date March 14th 2023
These newfag trolls

You gotta be more subtle with your trolling. You’re showing your hand too much now, lol.
 
>join date March 14th 2023
These newfag trolls

You gotta be more subtle with your trolling. You’re showing your hand too much now, lol.

"I don't know how to argue, so I'm just going to point at the join date and call this person a 'newfag' and accuse him of trolling. I'm so smart!"

holy shit
there are kiwis that unironically got a shot they changed the fucking definition of vaccine for?

One of these threads has people saying you're "less likely" to get mycarditus after the shot. In other words, they're having to admit the vaccine actually causes what it was supposed to prevent, but now it's fine because it's "less likely."

No other "vaccine" works this way.
 
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"I don't know how to argue, so I'm just going to point at the join date and call this person a 'newfag' and accuse him of trolling. I'm so smart!"



One of these threads has people saying you're "less likely" to get mycarditus after the shot. In other words, they're having to admit the vaccine actually causes what it was supposed to prevent, but now it's fine because it's "less likely."

No other "vaccine" works this way.

Says the person that cried “kill yourself” when you got your ass handed to you in this thread.

And will probably continue to cry kill your self as you make no fucking points.

Shut the fuck up hahahaha
 
awwww, bless your poor vaccinated heart ❤️

Well, like I said. It has seemingly worked. The first batch anyways. I’ve had heavy exposure and I never got covid. Btw you can always reply on the comments in my profile if you want me to keep replying.

We are on like page five of this now lmao
 
The replication machinery is taken from a naturally occurring virus, a mosquito-borne pathogen known as Venezuelan equine encephalitis virus that causes deadly brain swelling in horses and humans. Notably, scientists at Arcturus have removed key genes from the viral sequence backbone, thus rendering the system non-infectious and safe for use in humans.
Watch anti-vaxers piss their pants about this.
Another saRNA jab for COVID-19 was approved on an emergency-use basis in India last year; however, that vaccine’s less-impressive clinical data, the provisional nature of the product’s authorization, and India’s less stringent regulatory requirements have all led industry insiders to consider ARCT-154’s approval to be the field’s true watershed moment.
Are you saying India not numba one?!
Also stay the fuck away from me you fucking spike protein superpredators
Better wear a mask. 😷
But it's possibly contagious like the Wuflu vaxx is if you come in contact with the body fluids of a recently vaxxed individual.
It never said that anywhere in the article.
A closer problem at hand: wouldn't the replicase create double-stranded RNAs, which is a potent stimulus for interferon response?
The saRNA vaccine platform does have some downsides. Because of the added genetic instructions, the jabs tend to contain longer sequences — typically at least three times the length of what is used in conventional mRNA shots — which adds complexity to the manufacturing process.

They also engage with the immune system in intricate ways — for example, by forming replication intermediates that help to stimulate beneficial immune-signaling pathways. However, excessive stimulation can backfire, including when the vaccine prompts the immune system to block RNA replication, thereby nullifying its benefits.
It is thrme Japanese. The Nip Jab will just give you autism, a cat tail and cat ears. And make your penis 2 inch long.
@Catler wants it now.
are you developing skills and buying tools that allow you to be more independent from society in general?
No because I'm not a prepper.
Unfortunately "but I was forced, and I only got one clot shot!" isn't a known cure for vaccine injury.
Vaccine injury isn't real unless a vaccine beat you up, you hysterical vagina.
 
I had a very bad case of it (didn't need to be hospitalized but I was out of commission for 3 weeks) in 2021, and I never got the vax. However, I have family who did get vaxmaxxed, and they've had Covid several times since, and they've not done well with it at any point. (And no, they're not fat.)
Well you fall into the category of "haven't had it since" (quote marks because you can have it so slightly you don't really notice or just call it a cold). Which is the common pattern. I had something which definitely left me feeling pretty tired but it didn't progress past that fortunately and I never got tested for it. Conversely I have a mate whose partner was one of those "you're killing people if you don't wear a mask" types and has had every shot prescribed. She has been ill for over a year now and latest prognosis is there's something wrong with her immune system. I haven't said anything to my mate about vaccines because they're both quite progressive and it's their choice, it wouldn't do any good (or I might risk it) and because I suspect deep down he at least might suspect there's a connection.

The companies involved in this need to be razed to the ground and every asset intellectual and physical liquidised and returned to our governments to be used for public good (this may necessitate new governments as well, mind you).
 
Yeah no, I'm going to say piss off. If these faggots got their way, they absolutely would've jumped you in the parking lot and forcibly injected you. ESPECIALLY if you worked in a hospital. They TRIED doing that in Australia. They tried coming to people's doors and asking them if they were and weren't vaccinated and why. It wasn't just in 3rd world countries. It wasn't just in pozzed commie western countries. It was in Burgerland too. I have 0 doubt in my mind that if they could legally sue you for not taking the jab, they would've. I've even heard of businesses that CHARGED EXTRA if you had no vaccination card or straight up FINED you for not presenting one at your place of employment. Intent is important in determining whether people were forced to or not.

The faggot COVIDians had every intention of using any means possible to force you to take that jab. Pretending otherwise is cope. If it was legal, you would show up for work one day, two guys would hold you down and they'd forcibly inject into your arm. Make no mistake. These people are FUCKING EVIL. Those death camps weren't built for nothing.
Anyone else disappointed that the govt, and its agents, didn't attempt door-to-door forced injections in their locality? I genuinely don't know what I would've done but, man, at the time I was itching to find out. (Pure LARPy masturbation fantasy, have to be honest, but part of me was sincerely wishing they'd try it).
 
Anyone else disappointed that the govt, and its agents, didn't attempt door-to-door forced injections in their locality? I genuinely don't know what I would've done but, man, at the time I was itching to find out. (Pure LARPy masturbation fantasy, have to be honest, but part of me was sincerely wishing they'd try it).

They did it in China. Saw footage of people being dragged from their homes.

Some of the folks who resisted are better off for it. Matt Strickland is still running his business despite the fact that he defied the restrictions. People remember you when you actually take a stand for what you believe in. Strickland endured a couple years' worth of pain and his business is thriving today. Can't say the same for a lot of others that folded under the pressure.


It was never about health and safety. It was always about control.
 
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