Georgia journalist is one of few people in world who’s immune to ALL known variants of COVID

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The Georgian journalist is one of the few people in the world who is completely immune to ALL known variants of COVID and his blood would still kill the virus even if diluted 90%.

  • John Hollis, 56, harbors superantigens that have given him extreme immunity against COVID
  • Your blood can be diluted 10,000 times and it will still kill 90% of the virus.
  • The bizarre discovery occurred when he enrolled in a study on a whim

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A journalist in Georgia discovered that he has “super blood” that makes him one of the most immune to COVID-19 in the world.

Tests on John Hollis, 56, revealed that his blood could be diluted 10,000 times and still kill 90 percent of coronaviruses.

Hollis’s blessing goes even further: his antibodies are not only present in abundance, but their potency seems to last forever.

He is also immune to all of the increasingly powerful variants of the virus, and scientists believe his “superpower” could even extend to SARS.

“My story is crazy,” he said, describing himself as “an outlier of epic proportions.”

Tests on John Hollis, 56, found his blood could be diluted 10,000 times and still kill 90 percent of coronaviruses

Liotta (pictured) is co-director of the Center for Applied Proteomics and Molecular Medicine.

According to Hollis, he is one of only four people in the world identified with such exceptional immunity. However, scientists have said that as many as 1 in 100 may be almost completely immune to the virus, she said.

Hollis, who is a spokesman for George Mason University in Virginia, discovered that he possessed the rare “super-antibodies” under peculiar circumstances.

“It’s been a crazy ride,” he said.

In mid-2020, he was asked by faculty member Lance Liotta to prepare a press release requesting that people who had been exposed to COVID-19 participate in a study he was conducting.

Liotta is co-director of the Center for Applied Proteomics and Molecular Medicine.

At the end of a 45-minute meeting in Liotta’s office in early April, Hollis mentioned on a whim that he was surprised he didn’t contract COVID even though his roommate was unwell with the disease.

“I agreed to do it just to say that I had done it,” Hollis said.

They took saliva and blood samples and within two days he received a call from Liotta with the shocking news.

Hollis works as a spokesperson for George Mason University in Virginia.

Before the discovery, Hollis had been anxious that the virus could take his life. He said he even wrote a letter to his son, 17 at the time, which he gave to his lawyer friend to pass on to his son in the event of his death. of the.

Then things changed. “It meant I could cut my hair or shop with more confidence because it wasn’t a life-or-death situation,” she said.

According to Liotta, Hollis had contracted the virus months earlier and created powerful antibodies.

Looking back, Hollis remembers waking up in April 2020 with a runny nose; he thinks it’s possible that he had the virus at the time. That’s when Liotta believes he created the ‘super antibodies’.

“Here’s someone who had very high levels and never had any real symptomatic COVID,” Liotta told the Atlanta Journal-Constitutionwhere Hollis used to work as a sportswriter.

“And that showed me that what we think controls the antibody level might not be what all of us scientists thought in the past,” he said.

At no time did he doubt the legitimacy of Liotta’s findings either. “I knew a guy like that wouldn’t call me unless he was sure,” Hollis said of the scientist.

Hollis said that as glad as he is to have such immunity, he hopes the findings can help others survive COVID.