A recent study published in Nature warned about the risks of mRNA vaccines, stating that they can produce foreign proteins in the human body. According to Dr. Maarten Fornerod, a Dutch molecular biologist, the consequences of these foreign proteins are difficult to predict. This issue was discussed in a German news platform interview where Dr. Fornerod explained that foreign proteins produced by mRNA vaccines can have unknown risks, and their effect on the body can be unpredictable. He pointed to a study that showed mRNA vaccines produce unknown and harmful proteins that can give unusual instructions to the cell.
Dr. Fornerod underlined the potential danger of foreign proteins eliciting an unwanted immune response in the body. He suggested that when billions of people receive these vaccines, even if only one in a thousand individuals experiences problems, it becomes a major social issue. He cautioned that the unpredictable nature of foreign proteins makes it a global concern.
Further study revealed that the spike protein aimed at immunization was not the only foreign protein generated by mRNA vaccines. The study warned about the production of “off-target” proteins triggered by the cellular machinery. It indicated that the modified mRNA can produce harmful proteins due to ribosome misreading, which could produce a “bogus” protein.
Meanwhile, a Dutch nonprofit group and the Nature study both warn about the unpredictability of these foreign proteins and the potential harm they could cause. According to the study, foreign proteins induced in five of the 21 Pfizer mRNA vaccinees, or approximately one in four of the study participants. The results of the study prompted the group to recommend holding further research and experimentation on the population and prioritize safety studies before moving forward any vaccine distribution or administration.
In the program, Dr. Fornerod revealed that vaccine manufacturers were not thorough in checking for foreign proteins in the vaccines they produced. They were just as negligent in checking whether the products were being created in human cells. Immunologist Prof. Theo Schetters pointed out that other contaminants such as DNA were found in mRNA vaccines, and these undesirable elements could potentially become inserted into the recipients’ DNA.