I confess I don't understand the delivery mechanism of mRNA in food. Can anybody explain?
This was part of the complication of delivering the mRNA to inside the cells, it would get destroyed before reaching the cells by the chemicals and enzymes of digestion, I would think. The vaccine manufacturers resorted to a complicated weird lipid coating or piggybacking off another type of virus to deliver its payload.
Thanks to a $500,000 grant from the National Science Foundation, researchers are now looking to accomplish three goals. First, the team will try to successfully deliver DNA containing mRNA vaccines into plant cells, where they can replicate. Next, the study authors want to show that plants can actually produce enough mRNA to replace a traditional injection. Finally, the team will need to determine the right dosage people will need to eat to properly replace vaccinations.
I confess I don't understand the delivery mechanism of mRNA in food. Can anybody explain?
This was part of the complication of delivering the mRNA to inside the cells, it would get destroyed before reaching the cells by the chemicals and enzymes of digestion, I would think. The vaccine manufacturers resorted to a complicated weird lipid coating or piggybacking off another type of virus to deliver its payload.
Read that.
Some morons are trying to repurpose plant viruses to turn chloroplasts into mRNA factories.
https://archive.is/TRl5M
Here's an excerpt from the article:
It will be in the phyto nutrients your body keeps.