Re: The Wilton Approach - Splice Switching Oligos (conclusively corrected)
Answering Alt:
Just between you and me, the gal at the Wuhan lab (that Fauci funded on the sly when told he himself had to stop playing with it), she, very cleverly, added the ACE2 receptor element (a key) to her bat virus thus getting it into human cells via the ACE2 "door" on the human cell surface.. Pretty cool, eh?
But now, canny Stevey Wilton fluidizes that ACE2 protein so that it never attaches to the cell surface to begin with - as it normally does. No lock and no door....So the manufactured virus can't use the ACE2 key she gave it because the cell now has no ACE2 lock or door on the cell's surface to open.
As for how does a PMO "splice switcher" (Kole's SSOs - Splice Switching Oligos) create a soluble form of a naturally, normally, solid protein? At some point in the reading of the gene's RNA pathway it (the SSO) re-directs that reading process onto an "alterative" path that is sitting there at a some given point (apparently), and that alternative pathway (the path usually NOT taken here) then leads it to it's being formed as a fluid - or in a soluble form - rather than the normal path that builds a solid form of it. God knows the technicalities behind my basic hit and run understanding of it. I'm just a happy carefree sunbather in the science, I always say.
But I'm sure God probably knows how it works. Kole, Wilton, and others by now do too, I guess.