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“THERE IS A 2-WAY THREAT”
Prof. Dr. In stating that this situation poses a two-way threat, Akkoyunlu continued as follows:
“First, with this mutation, the binding of the virus to the cell increased very rapidly. However, faster binding does not mean that the virus will spread faster. Because the virus does not just bind to the cell to spread faster, it is not only for faster spread, but also due to other factors such as longer life span or higher cell permeability. However, the fact that about 40 percent of isolates in the coronavirus epidemic in the UK belonging to this new mutant virus has probably increased the doubt that the virus is spreading much faster. The second threat is one in the target regions of whole virus vaccines such as the Pfizer, Sputnik, Oxford vaccine. This means that the virus has the potential to spread faster and, at the same time, the virus can defeat most existing vaccines. “
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