"What does an mRNA store to allow the immune system to identify covid in the future?It is you who know nothing about vaccines.
For example, do you know that vaccines came from variolation, like Gen. Washington ordered in 1777?
The article used the word "vaccine", but that is actually wrong.When George Washington Vaccinated Revolutionary Soldiers Against Smallpox | Mental Floss
Smallpox vaccination was banned in America during the Revolutionary War, but George Washington was determined to protect his army no matter what.www.mentalfloss.com
Vaccines did not exist yet in 1777, and it was variolation instead.
Here is a simple test.
For any vaccine to work, the immune system has to store something in its memory to identify the particular pathogen.
What does an mRNA store to allow the immune system to identify covid in the future?
The answer is there is nothing. Since the mRNA injections do not contain a pathogen, it can't give the immune system anything to trigger on.
If you said "spike proteins", you would be wrong because our own exosomes have to also use spike proteins.
The answer is there is nothing."
You are technically correct in saying an mRNA (vaccine) does not store anything in immune system memory because no vaccine stores anything immune system memory. It is the bodies immune system reacting to a pathogen that creates memory. An yes the spike protein is recognized as a pathogen, otherwise there would be no antibody creation.
"We found mRNA vaccines generated functional memory B cells that increased from 3-6 months post-vaccination, with the majority of these cells cross-binding the Alpha, Beta, and Delta variants. mRNA vaccination further induced antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and early CD4+ T cell responses correlated with long-term humoral immunity. Recall responses to vaccination in individuals with pre-existing immunity primarily increased antibody levels without substantially altering antibody decay rates. Together, these findings demonstrate robust cellular immune memory to SARS-CoV-2 and variants for at least 6 months after mRNA vaccination."
...... We found mRNA vaccines generated functional memory B cells that increased from 3-6 months post-vaccination, with the majority of these cells cross-binding the Alpha, Beta, and Delta variants. mRNA vaccination further induced antigen-specific CD4+ and CD8+ T cells, and early CD4+ T cell responses correlated with long-term humoral immunity. Recall responses to vaccination in individuals with pre-existing immunity primarily increased antibody levels without substantially altering antibody decay rates. Together, these findings demonstrate robust cellular immune memory to SARS-CoV-2 and variants for at least 6 months after mRNA vaccination.
Science | AAAS
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