by Tom Renz, The Tenpenny Report:
Ah, it is so refreshing to read the long history of mRNA, according to Johns Hopkins University. mRNA was discovered in the 1960s, and in the 1970s, research began on how to deliver it into cells. It took 50 years and a COVID-19 pandemic and voila! The first mRNA jabs were brought to market in 2020.
What happened during the gap? Testing in mice happened in the 1990s and an mRNA rabies vaccine was tested in humans in 2013. I don’t think that went well. What about the other years? Research and more research, because the mRNA quickly degraded once inside the body before it could deliver its “message” (the RNA transcript, so to speak) to the cells.