I’d guess it would reinforce the importance of getting vaccinated quickly, when vaccines are available for a disease, the same as for avoiding other side effects of contracting disease that we already know about.
But OTOH, the researchers seem to have added reverse transcriptase, which is something not normally active or present in most viruses (otherwise typically know as the central dogma of molecular biology). I don’t know enough to extrapolate how much that affects the applicability of their conclusions.
[+] [-] greazy|4 years ago|reply
That's a terrible way to go about publishing your work.
> And what of the original journal submission? “They rejected it,” Jaenisch says.
I wonder why!
The article spells it out, whether any of these results apply to the real world is speculation at this point.
[+] [-] netizen-936824|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] greazy|4 years ago|reply
Yes we can see evidence of this in the human dna but thats not evidence that all viruses integrate.
[+] [-] anoncake|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jgjot-singh|4 years ago|reply
[+] [-] manwe150|4 years ago|reply
But OTOH, the researchers seem to have added reverse transcriptase, which is something not normally active or present in most viruses (otherwise typically know as the central dogma of molecular biology). I don’t know enough to extrapolate how much that affects the applicability of their conclusions.