top of page
blog G.jpg

BLOG

The tangled history of mRNA vaccines

Updated: Oct 31, 2022

Hundreds of scientists had worked on mRNA vaccines for decades before the coronavirus pandemic brought a breakthrough.

n late 1987, Robert Malone performed a landmark experiment. He mixed strands of messenger RNA with droplets of fat, to create a kind of molecular stew. Human cells bathed in this genetic gumbo absorbed the mRNA, and began producing proteins from it.

Realizing that this discovery might have far-reaching potential in medicine, Malone, a graduate student at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in La Jolla, California, later jotted down some notes, which he signed and dated. If cells could create proteins from mRNA delivered into them, he wrote on 11 January 1988, it might be possible to “treat RNA as a drug”. Another member of the Salk lab signed the notes, too, for posterity. Later that year, Malone’s experiments showed that frog embryos absorbed such mRNA. It was the first time anyone had used fatty droplets to ease mRNA’s passage into a living organism.


댓글


©COPYRIGHT 2023

logo_horiz-14f3564e85c4d54d9e85cc99ae903242.png
download.png
telegram (2).png
mewe-logo-151x49.png
gab (2).png
instagram 1.png
logo-full-day.png
bottom of page