mRNA, COVID-19 vaccine and cancer
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Mayo Clinic on MSN
Different types of COVID-19 vaccines: How they work
Find out how different vaccines for the coronavirus cause your body to create antibodies that fight the virus.
A team led by Neil King, a biochemistry professor at the University of Washington School of Medicine, is now exploring a new approach to COVID vaccines: using mRNA to let the body assemble its own viruslike particles.
In the fast-evolving field of medical science, a new artificial intelligence model may be about to change the way mRNA-based drugs and vaccines are designed. Developed through a collaboration between the University of Texas at Austin and pharmaceutical company Sanofi,