Researchers at the Goethe-University of Frankfurt and other sites explained that vaccines using a different technology known as messenger RNA (mRNA), such as those developed by BioNTech with Pfizer and Moderna, deliver the genetic material of the coronavirus spike protein only to fluid found inside cells, not to the nucleus of the cells.
“All mRNA-based vaccines should represent safe products,” the paper said.
It suggests vaccine makers using adenovirus vectors could modify the sequence of the spike protein “to avoid unintended splice reactions and to increase the safety of these pharmaceutical products.”
It comes as doctors in the UK have been urged to look for signs of stroke in people receiving the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine after three young patients were admitted to hospital and one died.
Researchers believe they have solved vaccine blood-clot puzzle
‘All mRNA-based vaccines should represent safe products,’ paper says
Samuel Osborne@SamuelOsborne93 2 days ago
60 comments
...
Researchers at the Goethe-University of Frankfurt and other sites explained that vaccines using a different technology known as messenger RNA (mRNA), such as those developed by BioNTech with Pfizer and Moderna, deliver the genetic material of the coronavirus spike protein only to fluid found inside cells, not to the nucleus of the cells.
“All mRNA-based vaccines should represent safe products,” the paper said.
It suggests vaccine makers using adenovirus vectors could modify the sequence of the spike protein “to avoid unintended splice reactions and to increase the safety of these pharmaceutical products.”
It comes as doctors in the UK have been urged to look for signs of stroke in people receiving the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine after three young patients were admitted to hospital and one died....
“All mRNA-based vaccines should represent safe products,” the paper said.
It suggests vaccine makers using adenovirus vectors could modify the sequence of the spike protein “to avoid unintended splice reactions and to increase the safety of these pharmaceutical products.”
It comes as doctors in the UK have been urged to look for signs of stroke in people receiving the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine after three young patients were admitted to hospital and one died.
Researchers believe they have solved vaccine blood-clot puzzle
‘All mRNA-based vaccines should represent safe products,’ paper says
Samuel Osborne@SamuelOsborne93 2 days ago
60 comments
...
Researchers at the Goethe-University of Frankfurt and other sites explained that vaccines using a different technology known as messenger RNA (mRNA), such as those developed by BioNTech with Pfizer and Moderna, deliver the genetic material of the coronavirus spike protein only to fluid found inside cells, not to the nucleus of the cells.
“All mRNA-based vaccines should represent safe products,” the paper said.
It suggests vaccine makers using adenovirus vectors could modify the sequence of the spike protein “to avoid unintended splice reactions and to increase the safety of these pharmaceutical products.”
It comes as doctors in the UK have been urged to look for signs of stroke in people receiving the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine after three young patients were admitted to hospital and one died....
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