|
|
|
|
|
by mikedilger
1834 days ago
|
|
Not that I have any knowledge on this subject, but why would a vaccine that stimulates the creation of a bit of spike protein create a "much broader and more durable immune response" than the actual virus which I presume creates a hell of a lot more of that exact same spike protein? Genuinely curious, because my simpleton assumption would be the opposite. |
|
Problem is, the "some other part" can mutate more easily into a form that the immune system no longer recognizes than the spike protein can, because the spike protein has to keep its form in order to react with the ACE2 receptors and enter a human cell. So the concern isn't that a real infection doesn't leave you immune to the virus you got sick with, but that the immunity might not apply or be as robust against a variant where the "some other part" has mutated into a different form.
The mRNA vaccines only cause your cells to make the (difficult to significantly mutate) spike protein, so the expectation is that vaccinated people would have a robust immune response against any variants which have that spike protein, regardless of whatever else changed, and a variant with an unrecognizable mutation of the spike protein would be less infectious anyway, as it could no longer successfully enter human cells either.
The results of the paper seem to indicate that this is not a problem in practice (so far - new variants are still evolving), but it's nice that someone checked.