If this is true then there is no way the government can say oops. They will have to continue pushing the lie.
Quote:
In contrast, our data provide valuable details on the involvement of spike protein subunits in DNA damage repair, indicating that fulllength spikebased vaccines may inhibit the recombination of V(D)J in B cells, which is also consistent with a recent study that a fulllength spikebased vaccine induced lower antibody titers compared to the RBDbased vaccine [28]. This suggests that the use of antigenic epitopes of the spike as a SARSCoV2 vaccine might be safer and more efficacious than the fulllength spike.
I have seen studies that suggests the vaccine keeps "working" long past when they should, which would be bad.pagerman @ work said:Sort of, potentially.baron_von_awesome said:Bad, that's why it was stupid to skip 6-10 years of long term safety studies.BoDog said:
Ok, cliff notes for the reading comprehension impaired.
Jab good or bad long term?
Both the virus and the vaccine have this property. So, getting the virus (i.e. "natural immunity") would have the same impact as getting the vaccine with regard to this activity.
There is no "victory dance" to be done by either "side" here. The only people that this won't impact are people that never get the current vaccines and never get or get exposed to the virus.
I don't know how many people that will eventually actually be (I would bet a somewhat small number, but that is a completely uneducated, wild-ass guess).
All of which assumes that the lab experiments bear out in actual humans, and I have no idea how likely or unlikely that is.
Bottom line is that this is a "feature" of the virus, not the vaccines.
The research may lead to a better (safer) vaccine that does not have this "feature" of the virus.
NOTE: all of the above is from a layman's reading of the study results linked in the OP. I am not in any way, shape or form a scientist, doctor or medical professional, nor do I claim to be. I could be completely off base.
Yes.CCP Joe Veggie said:BusterAg said:Is this facetious?baron_von_awesome said:
I think the Novavax vaccine that is coming would be free from this 'unexpected' side effect.
Novavax IS the spike protein. Why wouldn't Novavax cause this side effect, at least for a while.
it says this;
indicating that full length spike based vaccines may inhibit the recombination of V(D)J in B cells
is Novavax full length?
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41541-021-00369-6Quote:
So far, results of phase III clinical efficacy trials were reported and
published for a single subunit vaccine only98, which is manufactured
by the company Novavax (NVX-CoV2373) (Table 1)98,99 and
is still in a stage before regulatory approval100. It consists of the
trimeric full-length spike that is produced as....
Someone who is better at reading and comprehending biology stuff please explain this to me.Quote:
Our findings provide evidence of the spike protein hijacking the DNA damage repair machinery and adaptive immune machinery in vitro. We propose a potential mechanism by which spike proteins may impair adaptive immunity by inhibiting DNA damage repair. Although no evidence has been published that SARSCoV2 can infect thymocytes or bone marrow lymphoid cells, our in vitro V(D)J reporter assay shows that the spike protein intensely impeded V(D)J recombination. Consistent with our results, clinical observations also show that the risk of severe illness or death with COVID19 increases with age, especially older adults who are at the highest risk [22]. This may be because SARSCoV2 spike proteins can weaken the DNA repair system of older people and consequently impede V(D)J recombination and adaptive immunity. In contrast, our data provide valuable details on the involvement of spike protein subunits in DNA damage repair, indicating that fulllength spikebased vaccines may inhibit the recombination of V(D)J in B cells, which is also consistent with a recent study that a fulllength spikebased vaccine induced lower antibody titers compared to the RBDbased vaccine [28]. This suggests that the use of antigenic epitopes of the spike as a SARSCoV2 vaccine might be safer and more efficacious than the fulllength spike. Taken together, we identified one of the potentially important mechanisms of SARSCoV2 suppression of the host adaptive immune machinery. Furthermore, our findings also imply a potential side effect of the fulllength spikebased vaccine. This work will improve the understanding of COVID19 pathogenesis and provide new strategies for designing more efficient and safer vaccines.
Which is 100% supposition based on what you think you know. The notion that the vaccine "works long past when it should" would be counter to the idea that the immunity fades (and faster than "natural" immunity) and thus requires a booster to maintain efficacy. Ironically this has been one of the criticisms of the vaccine: that any protection it provides is short-lived, particularly compared to "natural" immunity.baron_von_awesome said:I have seen studies that suggests the vaccine keeps "working" long past when they should, which would be bad.pagerman @ work said:Sort of, potentially.baron_von_awesome said:Bad, that's why it was stupid to skip 6-10 years of long term safety studies.BoDog said:
Ok, cliff notes for the reading comprehension impaired.
Jab good or bad long term?
Both the virus and the vaccine have this property. So, getting the virus (i.e. "natural immunity") would have the same impact as getting the vaccine with regard to this activity.
There is no "victory dance" to be done by either "side" here. The only people that this won't impact are people that never get the current vaccines and never get or get exposed to the virus.
I don't know how many people that will eventually actually be (I would bet a somewhat small number, but that is a completely uneducated, wild-ass guess).
All of which assumes that the lab experiments bear out in actual humans, and I have no idea how likely or unlikely that is.
Bottom line is that this is a "feature" of the virus, not the vaccines.
The research may lead to a better (safer) vaccine that does not have this "feature" of the virus.
NOTE: all of the above is from a layman's reading of the study results linked in the OP. I am not in any way, shape or form a scientist, doctor or medical professional, nor do I claim to be. I could be completely off base.
This is bad because you have a chance to not catch covid, but with the vaccine it looks like you are guaranteeing DNA damage. So yes, I will take a victory dance.
I'm not a biologist. Hell didn't even stay at a Holiday Inn last night.A Net Full of Jello said:Someone who is better at reading and comprehending biology stuff please explain this to me.Quote:
Our findings provide evidence of the spike protein hijacking the DNA damage repair machinery and adaptive immune machinery in vitro. We propose a potential mechanism by which spike proteins may impair adaptive immunity by inhibiting DNA damage repair. Although no evidence has been published that SARSCoV2 can infect thymocytes or bone marrow lymphoid cells, our in vitro V(D)J reporter assay shows that the spike protein intensely impeded V(D)J recombination. Consistent with our results, clinical observations also show that the risk of severe illness or death with COVID19 increases with age, especially older adults who are at the highest risk [22]. This may be because SARSCoV2 spike proteins can weaken the DNA repair system of older people and consequently impede V(D)J recombination and adaptive immunity. In contrast, our data provide valuable details on the involvement of spike protein subunits in DNA damage repair, indicating that fulllength spikebased vaccines may inhibit the recombination of V(D)J in B cells, which is also consistent with a recent study that a fulllength spikebased vaccine induced lower antibody titers compared to the RBDbased vaccine [28]. This suggests that the use of antigenic epitopes of the spike as a SARSCoV2 vaccine might be safer and more efficacious than the fulllength spike. Taken together, we identified one of the potentially important mechanisms of SARSCoV2 suppression of the host adaptive immune machinery. Furthermore, our findings also imply a potential side effect of the fulllength spikebased vaccine. This work will improve the understanding of COVID19 pathogenesis and provide new strategies for designing more efficient and safer vaccines.
A Net Full of Jello said:
And so, the people who have been healthy and got the vaccine basically just tanked their immune systems? And it cannot be undone with any of our current technology?
A Net Full of Jello said:
Okay. I haven't had either, but my daughter tested positive for the antibodies. So I guess she's the only one that screwed.
Rapier108 said:
Good grief people, can we back up from the cliff.
It's either that or we need to go back into full lockdown forever based on the way some of you are acting.
As CCP said, the lockdowns don't work. But this study reaffirms my decision not to willingly inject myself with the shot. If I get covid walking around living my life, that's one thing. I'm not going to intentionally take a shot that we waved many of our trials and regulations to rush to market and hope for the best, though.Rapier108 said:
Good grief people, can we back up from the cliff.
It's either that or we need to go back into full lockdown forever based on the way some of you are acting.
Rapier108 said:
Post this on F84 and see how long your ban would be.
Ugh, seems like the China virus killed sarcasm understanding.A Net Full of Jello said:As CCP said, the lockdowns don't work. But this study reaffirms my decision not to willingly inject myself with the shot. If I get covid walking around living my life, that's one thing. I'm not going to intentionally take a shot that we waved many of our trials and regulations to rush to market and hope for the best, though.Rapier108 said:
Good grief people, can we back up from the cliff.
It's either that or we need to go back into full lockdown forever based on the way some of you are acting.
This.Rapier108 said:Ugh, seems like the China virus killed sarcasm understanding.A Net Full of Jello said:As CCP said, the lockdowns don't work. But this study reaffirms my decision not to willingly inject myself with the shot. If I get covid walking around living my life, that's one thing. I'm not going to intentionally take a shot that we waved many of our trials and regulations to rush to market and hope for the best, though.Rapier108 said:
Good grief people, can we back up from the cliff.
It's either that or we need to go back into full lockdown forever based on the way some of you are acting.
In no way do I support lockdowns or the shots, but right now this is in vitro tests only. As we've seen in the past, in vitro tests do not always end up matching real world results. Cause for concern, yes. Reason to go panic, no.
But shouldn't the unknown also give pause to all the vaccine mandates?pagerman @ work said:This.Rapier108 said:Ugh, seems like the China virus killed sarcasm understanding.A Net Full of Jello said:As CCP said, the lockdowns don't work. But this study reaffirms my decision not to willingly inject myself with the shot. If I get covid walking around living my life, that's one thing. I'm not going to intentionally take a shot that we waved many of our trials and regulations to rush to market and hope for the best, though.Rapier108 said:
Good grief people, can we back up from the cliff.
It's either that or we need to go back into full lockdown forever based on the way some of you are acting.
In no way do I support lockdowns or the shots, but right now this is in vitro tests only. As we've seen in the past, in vitro tests do not always end up matching real world results. Cause for concern, yes. Reason to go panic, no.
On top of which, I haven't seen anything in the study (and again I am not a scientist, doctor or medical professional) that indicates if the damage to the DNA repair system is permanent, long-term, short term, or what.
Until that is known, freaking out one way or the other doesn't seem warranted.
That said, it would be interesting to know if this "feature" of the virus is something that would just naturally happen or if it would need to be something engineered into the virus for some reason (like maybe, oh I don't know, to make it more deadly?).
People are being compelled via threat to their ability to earn a living to put this unknown into their bodies. I would strongly prefer to have the long-term effects known before doing so.pagerman @ work said:This.Rapier108 said:Ugh, seems like the China virus killed sarcasm understanding.A Net Full of Jello said:As CCP said, the lockdowns don't work. But this study reaffirms my decision not to willingly inject myself with the shot. If I get covid walking around living my life, that's one thing. I'm not going to intentionally take a shot that we waved many of our trials and regulations to rush to market and hope for the best, though.Rapier108 said:
Good grief people, can we back up from the cliff.
It's either that or we need to go back into full lockdown forever based on the way some of you are acting.
In no way do I support lockdowns or the shots, but right now this is in vitro tests only. As we've seen in the past, in vitro tests do not always end up matching real world results. Cause for concern, yes. Reason to go panic, no.
On top of which, I haven't seen anything in the study (and again I am not a scientist, doctor or medical professional) that indicates if the damage to the DNA repair system is permanent, long-term, short term, or what.
Until that is known, freaking out one way or the other doesn't seem warranted.
That said, it would be interesting to know if this "feature" of the virus is something that would just naturally happen or if it would need to be something engineered into the virus for some reason (like maybe, oh I don't know, to make it more deadly?).
OK.WHOOP!'91 said:People are being compelled via threat to their ability to earn a living to put this unknown into their bodies. I would strongly prefer to have the long-term effects known before doing so.pagerman @ work said:This.Rapier108 said:Ugh, seems like the China virus killed sarcasm understanding.A Net Full of Jello said:As CCP said, the lockdowns don't work. But this study reaffirms my decision not to willingly inject myself with the shot. If I get covid walking around living my life, that's one thing. I'm not going to intentionally take a shot that we waved many of our trials and regulations to rush to market and hope for the best, though.Rapier108 said:
Good grief people, can we back up from the cliff.
It's either that or we need to go back into full lockdown forever based on the way some of you are acting.
In no way do I support lockdowns or the shots, but right now this is in vitro tests only. As we've seen in the past, in vitro tests do not always end up matching real world results. Cause for concern, yes. Reason to go panic, no.
On top of which, I haven't seen anything in the study (and again I am not a scientist, doctor or medical professional) that indicates if the damage to the DNA repair system is permanent, long-term, short term, or what.
Until that is known, freaking out one way or the other doesn't seem warranted.
That said, it would be interesting to know if this "feature" of the virus is something that would just naturally happen or if it would need to be something engineered into the virus for some reason (like maybe, oh I don't know, to make it more deadly?).
Potentially.C@LAg said:
The difference is that one just screws you once.
They other screws you twice up front, then once every 6-12 months.
Sure, but no one is telling them they have to get covid if they want to travel, eat in a restaurant, shop in a store, continue employment, or other everyday things that some are trying to keep restricted to those who show proof of vaccination.pagerman @ work said:Potentially.C@LAg said:
The difference is that one just screws you once.
They other screws you twice up front, then once every 6-12 months.
But people have gotten covid more than once.
See my post from 3:10.A Net Full of Jello said:Sure, but no one is telling them they have to get covid if they want to travel, eat in a restaurant, shop in a store, continue employment, or other everyday things that some are trying to keep restricted to those who show proof of vaccination.pagerman @ work said:Potentially.C@LAg said:
The difference is that one just screws you once.
They other screws you twice up front, then once every 6-12 months.
But people have gotten covid more than once.
That is what I am getting from this. The spike protein can have a nasty effect on you. But, if you have had the virus you should have antibodies to prevent reinfection and that you will hopefully recover from the damage the viruses spike protein did to you.C@LAg said:
The difference is that one just screws you once.
They other screws you twice up front, then once every 6-12 months.
C@LAg said:if they had only tested this vaccine like they normally do, we would have answers., instead of mandates.PaulC_80 said:That is what I am getting from this. The spike protein can have a nasty effect on you. But, if you have had the virus you should have antibodies to prevent reinfection and that you will hopefully recover from the damage the viruses spike protein did to you.C@LAg said:
The difference is that one just screws you once.
They other screws you twice up front, then once every 6-12 months.
On the other hand, the vax also gives you exposure to the spike protein and it's harmful effects but since the vax does not give you lasting immunity then you will need additional jabs every few months. You will also sooner or later get the virus and the spike protein it brings with it. So multiple and regular exposures to the spike protein.
Also, the vax teaches your body to actually produce the spike protein. That seems really concerning to me. Even if that does not last long, that seems like a really bad thing to teach your body to do.
My guess is that repeated exposure to the spike protein through the vax every few months would do greater and more likely more serious damage than catching the virus once.