Given the RTC-specific T-cells abort the infection, but vaccinated individuals can still be infected, it seems the answer to the question is no.
What’s interesting is if a memory T-cell is activated against the virus, doesn’t that suggest the T-cells “remember” being previously exposed to that, or at least a similar virus? This is also another explanation for why natural immunity is superior to the vaccines.
A curious question. If you have natural immunity, due to previous infection, and, or, this RTC-specific T-Cell response, does your body abort the effects of the vaccine? It seems plausible.
Given the RTC-specific T-cells abort the infection, but vaccinated individuals can still be infected, it seems the answer to the question is no.
What’s interesting is if a memory T-cell is activated against the virus, doesn’t that suggest the T-cells “remember” being previously exposed to that, or at least a similar virus? This is also another explanation for why natural immunity is superior to the vaccines.
A curious question. If you have natural immunity, due to previous infection, and, or, this RTC-specific T-Cell response, does your body abort the effects of the vaccine? It seems plausible.