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Reason: None provided.

Generally, I'm talking about the SARS-CoV-2 genome.

27202..27387 is the base number range, like a page number, of where in the RNA I'm talking about.

ORF6 is the name of that section of RNA, called a gene, and/or the name of the hypothetical protein it would build. ORF I think means Open Reading Frame.

The letters are the amino acids that come together, in order, to make that protein. I threw it in for easier Copy/Paste should I ever need to search Google for it or anything.

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And when you look online you can find literature about ORF6 interacting/ plugging in with human nucleopores. Nucleopores being the little doorways that regulate access to and from the nucleus.

What my assertion is, is that a mutated bat virus shouldn't (couldn't?) have the molecule that unlocks human nucleopores.

Coronavirus is a very efficiently built disease, with only 10 genes and almost no junk DNA between the genes. It doesn't look wild to me.

1 year ago
2 score
Reason: None provided.

Generally, I'm talking about the SARS-CoV-2 genome.

27202..27387 is the base number range, like a page number, of where in the RNA I'm talking about.

ORF6 is the name of that section of RNA, called a gene, and/or the name of the hypothetical protein it would build. ORF I think means Operational Region of Function or some similar acronym.

The letters are the amino acids that come together, in order, to make that protein. I threw it in for easier Copy/Paste should I ever need to search Google for it or anything.

‐-----------------

And when you look online you can find literature about ORF6 interacting/ plugging in with human nucleopores. Nucleopores being the little doorways that regulate access to and from the nucleus.

What my assertion is, is that a mutated bat virus shouldn't (couldn't?) have the molecule that unlocks human nucleopores.

Coronavirus is a very efficiently built disease, with only 10 genes and almost no junk DNA between the genes. It doesn't look wild to me.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Generally, I'm talking about the SARS-CoV-2 genome.

27202..27387 is the base number range, like a page number, of where in the RNA I'm talking about.

ORF6 is the name of that section of RNA, called a gene, and/or the name of the hypothetical protein it would build. ORF I think means Operational Region of Function or some similar acronym.

The letters are the amino acids that come together, in order, to make that protein. I threw it in for easier Copy/Paste should I ever need to search Google for it or anything.

‐-----------------

And when you look online you can find literature about ORF6 interacting/ plugging in with human nucleopores. Nucleopores being the little doorways that regulate access to and from thee nucleus.

What my assertion is, is that a mutated bat virus shouldn't (couldn't?) have the molecule that unlocks human nucleopores.

Coronavirus is a very efficiently built disease, with only 10 genes and almost no junk DNA between the genes. It doesn't look wild to me.

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Generally, I'm talking about the SARS-CoV-2 genome.

27202..27387 is the base number range, like a page number, of where in the RNA I'm talking about.

ORF6 is the name of that section of RNA, called a gene, and/or the name of the hypothetical protein it would build.

The letters are the amino acids that come together, in order, to make that protein. I threw it in for easier Copy/Paste should I ever need to search Google for it or anything.

‐-----------------

And when you look online you can find literature about ORF6 interacting/ plugging in with human nucleopores. Nucleopores being the little doorways that regulate access to and from thee nucleus.

What my assertion is, is that a mutated bat virus shouldn't (couldn't?) have the molecule that unlocks human nucleopores.

Coronavirus is a very efficiently built disease, with only 10 genes and almost no junk DNA between the genes. It doesn't look wild to me.

1 year ago
1 score