Monday, February 6, 2023

RNA Half-Life Usually Two Minutes

RNA is an unstable and highly reactive molecule, and the human body is full of highly active molecular species.

https://www.researchgate.net/post/The-half-life-of-mRNA-is-very-short-How-do-the-results-of-mRNA-reflect-as-true-the-gene-expression

This is likely the reason mRNA treatments have to be refrigerated at near absolute zero. Unless the protective capsule is the miraculous carbo-engineering that is a natural virus envelope, the RNA is going to decompose on its own, never mind the environmental insults.
RNA is useful for short-range broadcast since it self-disassembles. You don't have to worry about capturing it and salvaging it; the stuff breaks itself down.

I'm pretty sure all RNA found outside a cell will be instantly attacked by any immune cell that can detect it as RNA. Won't even check if it's your first. Just deleted. 

Some biologists did speculate that ""vaccinated"" test subjects would shed the spike protein and, sooner or later, functionally vaccinate those around them, but it seems they gave up the idea.

Yes, you are exposed to foreign RNA all the time. No, it does not survive anywhere near long enough to matter, and indeed in almost all cases (like 999999999 / 1000000000 or more) it will have already fragmented by the time it gets close to a replicating cell. 

"It will last an hour at most. Without a protective capsule anyway. But that could be enough time. And what about close contact? I had regular contact pretty much as soon as the vaccines came out."
https://nitter.unixfox.eu/GraniRau/status/1622374822146629633

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