I appreciate the hard work you have done, but your conclusions are incorrect. I will break it down for you piece by piece.
Luciferase
Luciferase is a an enzyme that catalyzes a reaction (in this case with the molecule luciferin + O2). All chemical reactions produce (or absorb) photons. Commonly these photons are in the infrared (loosely called "heat" because it is in the range of the vibrational energy transition of molecules). This one is special (though not unique) in that it produces photons in the visible spectrum and is thus easily visible under the microscope. When you attach Luciferase to another protein (a fusion or coexpression, I'm not sure which in this case) it allows you to see where that other protein of interest is or when it has been expressed. (In this case that is an HIV protein).
HIV-Luc
HIV-Luc cell line is a cell line that contains the HIV virus genome within the cells genome to study HIV. The "Luc" part is just the fusion of the Luciferase gene to the HIV genes so that it can be seen under the microscope when the HIV genes have been transcribed.
A "cell line" is a cell type that has been genetically altered to study specific diseases, or for convenience (immortal cell lines e.g.) or for tissue type studies, or for stem cell studies, etc. There are many different "cell lines". This one is used to study HIV with the convenience of the Luciferase reporter.
HIV is the lentivirus, not Luciferase.
HIV-Luc(ACE-2) From Fauci's email
This is using the HIV-Luc cell line, fused to ANOTHER protein (ACE-2) to study where the ACE-2--HIV-Luc protein is. ACE-2 is a transmembrane protein so the other part (HIV-Luc) would be hanging out in the cytosol, doing nothing except reporting where the ACE-2 protein is. This is useful for studying the ACE-2 protein and/or its interaction with the SARS S-protein.
The fact that it says "Coronavirus bioweapon production method" is nefarious. It looks to me like they were studying ACE-2 SARS-CoV-2 fusion efficiency. That's pretty standard stuff, but since it was obviously being done for nefarious purposes that makes it pretty evil. However, using HIV-Luc is not. That's just normal cell biology stuff.
This is not ingredients in the vaccine. The HIV-Luc cell line is used in virus testing and creation. This does not make it part of the virus either. It's just the cell line they used in its development which is completely unsurprising. This cell line was designed for testing all sorts of things.
If you want to find something sinister where there is nothing sinister I can not stop you. I have explained why the HIV-Luc system is a commonly used system.
There is something else I forgot to mention above. The lipid called SM-102 has nothing to do with Luciferase specifically. The sheet you used in your graphic explains how it has been used to create a lipid nanoparticle to deliver mRNA for the reporter Luciferase. It can be used to create the same type of nanoparticle to deliver ANY mRNA, such as the mRNA that encodes the SARS-CoV-2 S protein, or a protein for a cancer specific surface protein (a common usage) or mRNA for any protein you want.
In the sheet you have it says "Luciferase" as an example because it is the most used reporter protein because when it catalyzes its reaction it gives off a photon in the visible spectrum. That's IT. Luciferase is not only not sinister, it is used all over the world in every bio lab everywhere because it is so damn useful, because it brings light (visible) and allows us to see, in real time, what is going on. If I used it as a reporter in my nanoparticle it tells me exactly which cells my nanoparticle made it into. That is useful for a million reasons.
Was it called "Luciferase" (bringer of light) 120+ years ago by the discoverer in tribute to Satan? Maybe, maybe not. I have no idea. But if that is true, that is not something that most of the hundreds of thousands (probably) of people that use it regularly have any clue about (myself included until recently) Its just an amazingly useful tool in the cell bio toolkit.
I appreciate the hard work you have done, but your conclusions are incorrect. I will break it down for you piece by piece.
Luciferase
Luciferase is a an enzyme that catalyzes a reaction (in this case with the molecule luciferin + O2). All chemical reactions produce (or absorb) photons. Commonly these photons are in the infrared (loosely called "heat" because it is in the range of the vibrational energy transition of molecules). This one is special (though not unique) in that it produces photons in the visible spectrum and is thus easily visible under the microscope. When you attach Luciferase to another protein (a fusion or coexpression, I'm not sure which in this case) it allows you to see where that other protein of interest is or when it has been expressed. (In this case that is an HIV protein).
HIV-Luc
HIV-Luc cell line is a cell line that contains the HIV virus genome within the cells genome to study HIV. The "Luc" part is just the fusion of the Luciferase gene to the HIV genes so that it can be seen under the microscope when the HIV genes have been transcribed.
A "cell line" is a cell type that has been genetically altered to study specific diseases, or for convenience (immortal cell lines e.g.) or for tissue type studies, or for stem cell studies, etc. There are many different "cell lines". This one is used to study HIV with the convenience of the Luciferase reporter.
HIV is the lentivirus, not Luciferase.
HIV-Luc(ACE-2) From Fauci's email
This is using the HIV-Luc cell line, fused to ANOTHER protein (ACE-2) to study where the ACE-2--HIV-Luc protein is. ACE-2 is a transmembrane protein so the other part (HIV-Luc) would be hanging out in the cytosol, doing nothing except reporting where the ACE-2 protein is. This is useful for studying the ACE-2 protein and/or its interaction with the SARS S-protein.
The fact that it says "Coronavirus bioweapon production method" is nefarious. It looks to me like they were studying ACE-2 SARS-CoV-2 fusion efficiency. That's pretty standard stuff, but since it was obviously being done for nefarious purposes that makes it pretty evil. However, using HIV-Luc is not. That's just normal cell biology stuff.
Can the HIV part of this infect people?
This is not ingredients in the vaccine. The HIV-Luc cell line is used in virus testing and creation. This does not make it part of the virus either. It's just the cell line they used in its development which is completely unsurprising. This cell line was designed for testing all sorts of things.
Again, totally common cell bio stuff.
Totally normal HIV plasmids being used.
If you want to find something sinister where there is nothing sinister I can not stop you. I have explained why the HIV-Luc system is a commonly used system.
There is something else I forgot to mention above. The lipid called SM-102 has nothing to do with Luciferase specifically. The sheet you used in your graphic explains how it has been used to create a lipid nanoparticle to deliver mRNA for the reporter Luciferase. It can be used to create the same type of nanoparticle to deliver ANY mRNA, such as the mRNA that encodes the SARS-CoV-2 S protein, or a protein for a cancer specific surface protein (a common usage) or mRNA for any protein you want.
In the sheet you have it says "Luciferase" as an example because it is the most used reporter protein because when it catalyzes its reaction it gives off a photon in the visible spectrum. That's IT. Luciferase is not only not sinister, it is used all over the world in every bio lab everywhere because it is so damn useful, because it brings light (visible) and allows us to see, in real time, what is going on. If I used it as a reporter in my nanoparticle it tells me exactly which cells my nanoparticle made it into. That is useful for a million reasons.
Was it called "Luciferase" (bringer of light) 120+ years ago by the discoverer in tribute to Satan? Maybe, maybe not. I have no idea. But if that is true, that is not something that most of the hundreds of thousands (probably) of people that use it regularly have any clue about (myself included until recently) Its just an amazingly useful tool in the cell bio toolkit.