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Evidently several mRNA vaccines have been approved for swine (i.e. pigs and hogs), and many of the large commercial farms have been using them in their hogs since 2018. So most of the pork you buy at the grocery store comes from pigs injected with mRNA vaccines.
Most of the currently used inactivated porcine parvovirus (PPV) vaccines are based on strain NADL2 [12] which was first described in 1976 [13]. A novel subunit PPV vaccine (ReproCyc® ParvoFLEX, Boehringer Ingelheim) came on the European market in 2018 and is based on strain 27a, first isolated in 2001 [14].
Although first successful vaccination against rabies virus infection was performed by Louis Pasteur in the 19th century, every year about 50,000 patients, predominantly children, succumb to rabies infection because of insufficient availability of effective low-cost vaccines worldwide. The work presented here describes the protective capacity of such a vaccine candidate based on a non-replicating messenger RNA (mRNA). Here we highlight the efficacy of this type of vaccine in a highly fatal viral infection mouse model and demonstrate the induction of accepted correlates of protection in domestic pigs. The results extend and strengthen our previous work on mRNA-based vaccines protecting against Influenza. The data from Rabies and Influenza studies, together with the increased thermostability (manuscript in preparation) and the conceived cost-effectiveness of production suggest that non-replicating mRNA-based vaccines are an attractive and promising format for the development of protective vaccines against a wide range of infectious diseases.
EXCLUSIVE: The Jeffrey Epstein Files: Trove of never-before-seen emails and calendars gives unprecedented insight into late pedophile's network of power and influence that includes Chris Rock, Peter Thiel, Richard Branson and Irina Shayk
The Nobel Prize-winning computer scientist, Professor Yoshua Bengio, has urged that anyone building AI products should be registered and receive ethical training.
This week, he joined dozens of experts who penned an open letter, warning that AI could lead to the extinction of humanity, and should be a 'global priority' alongside catastrophic events like nuclear war and pandemics.
'It is challenging, emotionally speaking, for people who are inside (the AI sector),' Professor Bengio told the BBC.
'You could say I feel lost. But you have to keep going and you have to engage, discuss, encourage others to think with you.'
originally posted by: crankyoldman
Clip in Espanol
The problem being an Anon is it is all remedial, but sadly not all folks are Anons.