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Phil
Thanks. I googled. Little came up. Same for you I see
“PNAS published an article Nov 22 2005 titled “Mechanism of mRNA transport in the nucleus””
This is on mRNA transport OUT OF the nucleus. As I mentioned several times mRNA is formed in the nucleus (transcription) it is then used to make proteins the cytoplasm (trasnaltion)
Obviously there is a mechanism to transport mRNA OUT OF the nucleus.
In fact this undermines your contention (a little). mRNA transport out of the nucleus is quite involved. In the absence of evidence of a reverse mechanism there is no reason to think one exists
“Pubmed published an article on Nov 2005 titled “Mechanism of mRNA transport into the nucleus””
I couldn’t find this one, Google brings up the same article you previously cited “…transport in… ” not “into”
“An article published on viralzone titled “viral penetration in host nucleus” talking about viral RNAs, DNAs, etc pentratrating the nucleus.”
Yes As mentioned (first pointed out by you I believe Viral mRNA can and does enter the nucleus. This is mostly thanks to various proteins the virus supplies. If you look at the excellent source your provided (thanks!) You will see a nice table listing viral factors and host factors that enables the mRNA to enter. Obviously the vaccine lacks those viral factors, thus yet again yo uhave helped prove that vaccine mRNA DOES NOT enter the nucleus
“An article titled “Extracellular mRNA transported to the nucleus” published on June 16 2021 on nature .com .”
Thanks a lot for sharing. This one was a heavy Basic science article. I haven’t read one of those in quite some time. Thanks for the push.
At first glance it sort of supports what you’ve been saying “This study demonstrates for the first time that mRNA is itself utilized as an intercellular messenger molecule with nuclear functions.” (You are really ahead of the curve this study showed it for the first time and was only published in June 2021! AFTER you predicted it kudos!)
Sadly, it though it is a bit limited . The study looks at a specific protein ZC3H12D and its antitumor effect in natural killer cells (as I understood it, as mentioned it is pretty advanced stuff, Some of it went over my head). Using this to extrapolate to all cells is a bit of a stretch.