>>12794307ok
>>12794352>This is completely wrong you massive faggot. I was giving a quick and dirty explanation, as stated in another post.
>Are the spikes simply emitted from your cells or do they stay on/attached to the cell surface?This has to do on how the body develops immunity, I'll explain a bit more in detail
You have a special class of immune cells which have the job of identifying (I won't go into detail) an antigen and then express onto their surface (simplification) the target protein which you want to target with antibodies.
They express the protein on their surface and they "present" it to the naive immune cell which then becomes able to fight that specific thing which presents that specific protein.
>In either case, how much does this cause the immune system to attack your own cells and how much of a problem is this?You're describing and autoimmune disease, the specific protein you're targeting with the vaccination is not expressed in your body.
>As far as I can tell the coronavirus targets some specific cells/organs (respiratory etc..),No, Covid uses a specific protein to gather access to host cells, the ACE2 receptor.
Thing is that receptor is not equally abundant in the whole body so you percieve at selectively attacking a certain organ, but the virus does not know what an organ is.
>while the mrna vaccine just "infects" whatever cells it finds. Is this true and could it be a problem?It is not true, first because the mRNA vaccine does not create copies of the whole virus, so you don't have an infection, also the "job" of detecting and training the immune system is done by specific cells, you can't have a, dunno, liver cell doing it, they simply don't have that function.
>Could it be that antibodies are produced against the "other" part of the spikes that would otherwise be attached to the virus, and could it be a problem?I didn't understand the question
Cont.