This is when Adam first decided to ramp up his interest in the coronavirus and start really digging into the data to see if he could develop a cure: Febuary 1st, 2020. It took him three days to come up with his first potential cure. Since, he has scrapped his initial approach altogether in favor of exploring existing potential treatments, therapies and remedies.
View on Twitter
My love is nothing if not ambitious. He’s got a bug up his butt & is working on curing coronavirus rn. 🤷♂️
— Chelsea Belle (@verycosmic) February 1, 2020
View on Twitter
He's got a rough draft now & is just missing a few critical parts – start/stop codons, protospacers, and transfectible CRISPR/Cas-9 RNA.
I DON'T EVEN KNOW WHAT THOSE WORDS MEAN!
There's more to his draft but it's all code. 🤷♂️
Any scientists wanna help? pic.twitter.com/iifMwGRuc8
— Chelsea Belle (@verycosmic) February 3, 2020
View on Twitter
The only two genes that freely translate between FASTA & standard Kazusa table protein coding (standard RNA template in common use). The rest of the genome does not perfectly align under Kazusa. Code's been developed under Kazusa & inserted at the end of the non-Kazusa genome. 👀 pic.twitter.com/Q7lLM4YZBK
— Chelsea Belle (@verycosmic) February 3, 2020
View on Twitter
He thinks he has it licked. 🤷♂️
It took him about three days. Amazing if it works.
Guess now it's off to university to see if he can implement it.Also gotta get @HarvardResearch to let us use their on/off switch. pic.twitter.com/NtXCzzLQ8X
— Chelsea Belle (@verycosmic) February 4, 2020
View on Twitter
He thinks he has it licked. 🤷♂️
It took him about three days. Amazing if it works.
Guess now it's off to university to see if he can implement it.Also gotta get @HarvardResearch to let us use their on/off switch. pic.twitter.com/NtXCzzLQ8X
— Chelsea Belle (@verycosmic) February 4, 2020
View on Twitter
I'll let him tell you:
There's two areas of the genome that have been clearly engineered. One I can't tell how or why, but the other has added the CD4+ receptor, which allows HIV to attack immune cells, to the top of the "spike" that a regular coronavirus uses to infect cells.🤢
— Chelsea Belle (@verycosmic) February 4, 2020