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World

Has Moderna's Boss Said That Vaccines Can Alter Human DNA? A FactCheck

The claims misrepresents a 2017 Ted Talk of Tal Zaks where he talks about vaccines.

By - AFP | 12 April 2021 9:02 AM GMT

An article shared thousands of times on social media claims that Tal Zaks, the chief medical officer of US pharma firm Moderna, said messenger RNA vaccines can "alter" human DNA. The posts, which circulated online as Moderna's mRNA Covid-19 vaccine was administered to millions of people around the world, claim Zaks made the comments during a TEDx Talk. The claim is false: Zaks did not make the purported comments. Scientists have previously rejected false claims that mRNA vaccines can alter DNA.

"Bombshell: Moderna Chief Medical Officer Admits MRNA Alters DNA," reads the screenshot of an article shared on Twitter on March 20, 2021.

The post links to an article on US website DC Dirty Laundry.

The article, which has been shared more than 3,500 times on Facebook, reads: "While many in the media, Dr. Anthony Fauci and his merry band of chronic liars, and "fact checkers" have declared this claim as false, a video of a TEDx Beacon Street talk by Tal Zaks, chief medical officer of Moderna, Inc., one pharmaceutical company manufacturer of the experimental mRNA technology injection, confirms mRNA injection for COVID-19 can change your genetic code or DNA," the article reads.

The Moderna Covid-19 jab is an mRNA vaccine that uses an inert snippet of genetic code from the coronavirus. It triggers an immune response in the body that can repel the active virus.

The article was also published on multiple web pages, including here, here and here.

Below is the screenshot captured on April 6, 2021, of the misleading article

 

Similar claims have emerged on social media in various languages, including Chinese, French and Spanish.

The claim is false.

Misinterpreted comments

The article links to a TEDx Talk entitled "Rewriting the Genetic Code: A Cancer Cure In the Making" that Zaks gave in 2017.

During the talk, he said messenger RNA (mRNA) vaccines could be used to treat illnesses including influenza, cancer or genetic disorders.

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"Our body is made out of organs, our organs are made out of cells and in every cell there is this thing called messenger RNA or mRNA for short, which transmits the critical information from the DNA (in) our genes to the protein, which is really the stuff we are all made out of," he said. 

"This is the critical information that determines what a cell will actually do. So, we think of it like an operating system. It's not just in every cell of our body, it's actually, in every cell of every organism alive, it's the same thing. So if you could actually change that, which we call the software of life, if you could introduce a line of code or change a line of code, it turns out that it has profound implications for everything from the flu to cancer."

This quote was misleadingly used in the DC Dirty Laundry article to wrongly suggest that Zaks said mRNA vaccines can alter human DNA.

When he alluded to changing a "line of code", Zaks was in fact referring to messenger RNA, not DNA. 

AFP found no record of alleged statements from Zaks making the false claim shared in the social media posts.

mRNA vaccines

Scientists have widely rejected the unsubstantiated claim that mRNA vaccines can modify human DNA.

AFP has debunked social media posts sharing the false claim here and here.

Dr. María Victoria Sánchez, a researcher at the IMBECU-CCT-CONICET Immunology and Vaccine Development Laboratory in Argentina, told AFP that mRNA vaccines cannot penetrate a person's genes.

"The process is carried out in the cytoplasm, not in the nucleus of the cell," she said in a phone call on September 3, 2020. "Messenger RNA cannot "get into" our DNA."

"The mRNA is simply translated into a protein, it degrades rapidly, and it cannot be converted to DNA," Kenneth Witwer, professor of molecular and comparative pathobiology and neurology at the Johns Hopkins University's School of Medicine, told AFP on September 4, 2020 by email.

The same claim was also debunked by AFP in French and Spanish.

The article also falsely claims that billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates admitted that mRNA vaccines can alter human DNA, which AFP debunked here.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by BOOM staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)