What is reverse transcriptase?
Reverse transcriptase is any protein that can take RNA or mRNA and convert it into a DNA version of that mRNA or RNA gene. Once turned into DNA, that gene can then enter the nucleus of the cell.
Once a segment of DNA is within the nucleus, it can interact with and change the DNA of that cell.
If the reverse transcribed DNA integrates into a cell’s genome inside the nucleus of the cell, then that cell and all its progeny will carry that altered DNA.
If a DNA alteration event happens in a Stem cell, many different cell types throughout the body can be affected. Altered DNA can produce altered proteins, for example if mRNA for a spike protein gets turned into DNA in a stem cell, and that DNA for spike protein gets integrated into a reading frame of that stem cell’s genome, then all the blood cells, immune cells, liver cells and skin cells will be able to make spike proteins, which are an unnatural presence in the human body.
If the spike protein DNA gets into another part of that stem cells genome, interrupting a normal gene, that stem cell may become precancerous or cancerous. All of this highlights the grave risks of mRNA injections.
Can I make a suggestion? Change that blue box that references
https://danielnagase.substack.com/p/lets-look-at-2-scientific-studies
to something that is obvious it's a link to another page. It may not be clear that it's a link.
Thanks