Study Proves COVID Shots Can Cause Off-Target Immune Responses
In early 2021, Stephanie Seneff, Ph.D., warned that the replacing of uracil with synthetic
methylpseudouridine in the COVID shots — a process known as codon optimization —
could cause severe health problems
Recent research confirms this, showing that the use of methylpseudouridine can cause a
glitch in the decoding, thereby triggering the production of off-target aberrant proteins.
The antibodies that develop as a result may, in turn, trigger off-target immune reactions
According to the authors, off-target cellular immune responses occur in 25% to 30% of
people who have received the COVID shot
According to an anonymous source, there’s evidence suggesting Pfizer and BioNTech
fabricated data to hide this “glitch” from regulators
Previous research has demonstrated that codon optimization can result in misshaped
and misfolded proteins that don’t match the natural protein being emulated, and that
these misshapen proteins can trigger immunogenicity that in some cases may not
become apparent until years later
methylpseudouridine in the COVID shots — a process known as codon optimization —
could cause severe health problems
Recent research confirms this, showing that the use of methylpseudouridine can cause a
glitch in the decoding, thereby triggering the production of off-target aberrant proteins.
The antibodies that develop as a result may, in turn, trigger off-target immune reactions
According to the authors, off-target cellular immune responses occur in 25% to 30% of
people who have received the COVID shot
According to an anonymous source, there’s evidence suggesting Pfizer and BioNTech
fabricated data to hide this “glitch” from regulators
Previous research has demonstrated that codon optimization can result in misshaped
and misfolded proteins that don’t match the natural protein being emulated, and that
these misshapen proteins can trigger immunogenicity that in some cases may not
become apparent until years later