>A study out today reveals the jabs may unexpectedly prompt cells to produce small amounts of unintended proteins
>There is no evidence that these mistakes compromise the safety of the COVID-19 vaccines, which saved millions of lives
(no actual proof for this statement)
>researchers have already proposed a fix
>scientists say there is nothing alarming about the new work, reported today in Nature
(so what's the fix, say its nothing to be worried about?)
>Ribosomes sometimes translate natural mRNAs incorrectly
>the researchers wanted to know whether such mistakes are more common when altered bases are inserted
lolwut...this is the essence of frameshifting, this is like shifting your notes up a fret on the neck and expecting your scale to remain the same, preposterous on its face for anyone remotely informed
>Pfizer’s and Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccines were much more likely to induce frameshifted proteins than mRNAs with normal uridines.
>In their experiments roughly 8% of the proteins produced from their experimental mRNAs were frameshifted.
>With natural mRNAs frameshifting typically produces inactive proteins that are broken down by the cell.
(Yes now why arent you mentioning the ways in which this process is affected by the mrna experiment? You expect prople to know what uridine or pseudouridine is?)
>COVID-19 vaccines may even get a boost from the misreading
[insert massive guffaw here]
>A Moderna spokesperson declined to comment on the findings
>It’s a bit like writing mom instead of mum, Willis says. “It means the same thing.”
(LMAO)
>Rolf Marschalek, a molecular biologist at Goethe University Frankfurt, says he would like to see more evidence before he is convinced that frameshifts are a significant issue for modified mRNAs
(this is shorthand for Its Fucking Unequivocal, I just cant say this right now because I will be frowned upon for saying anything bad about the gene editing experiments)