|
|
|
|
|
by AnthonBerg
1835 days ago
|
|
The swfinstitute.org link aside, there are different ways to define the term. It isn’t jthedisciple who is making the definition; It is a simple fact that there are two major definitions on the Wikipedia entry for gene therapy: Gene therapy is a medical field which focuses on the genetic modification of cells to produce a therapeutic effect [1] or the treatment of disease by repairing or reconstructing defective genetic material. [2] — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gene_therapy [1] – Kaji, Eugene H. (7 February 2001). "Gene and Stem Cell Therapies". JAMA. 285 (5): 545–550. https://doi.org/10.1001%2Fjama.285.5.545 – ISSN 0098-7484. PMID 11176856. [2] Ermak G (2015). Emerging Medical Technologies. World Scientific. ISBN 978-981-4675-81-9 — mRNA vaccines are certainly a more ambiguous fit under the term “gene therapy”, but it can be parsed as such that they are a genetic modification of a viral cell to produce a therapeutic effect. With slightly more ambiguity but not at all without reason, we can parse mRNA vaccines as “the treatment of disease by reconstructing genetic material”. Even if the definition includes the word “defective”. To me the crux of the statement does not appear in the genetic material needing to be “defective”. Via metaphor: We may be unprotected from the elements by our shelter being defective, but it may also occur that shelter is simply missing, such as our immune response to SARS-CoV-2. I personally wouldn’t call mRNA vaccines gene therapy, but it’s more because it can induce misunderstandings on permanence rather than because of the un-parseability of the smaller term under the larger definition. |
|
I read this as a single definition rather than two distinct ones but, regardless of how you read this, mRNA vaccines do neither of these two things.
> it can be parsed as such that they are a genetic modification of a viral cell
No, it cannot be parsed like this. “Genetic modification” has a specific, technical meaning and mRNA vaccines do not perform it. Furthermore, I’m not even sure what you mean by “viral cell”, since viruses don’t form cells (they form virions). Do you mean a host cell infected by a virus? Because that doesn’t apply here: mRNA vaccines don’t specifically act on infected cells, they act on healthy cells.
> we can parse mRNA vaccines as “the treatment of disease by reconstructing genetic material”
Again, we cannot do this, because it’s flat out incorrect. What does “reconstructing genetic material” even mean in this context? There’s no defect, so there’s nothing to reconstruct, and the mRNA vaccine does not do so anyway since, again, it does not modify the host genome.
— In general I’ll note that several sentences in your answer simply make no biological sense and use made-up terms.