Immune Cells at the Frontline of SFTSV Infection
Sungjun Park, Chonsaeng Kim

TL;DR
This paper reviews how immune cells respond to SFTSV infection and how the virus disrupts immune defenses, leading to severe disease.
Contribution
The paper integrates clinical, experimental, and molecular evidence to clarify immune cell roles in SFTSV pathogenesis.
Findings
Monocytes and B cells are major viral reservoirs and sources of inflammation during SFTSV infection.
T cells and dendritic cells show functional impairments in severe SFTSV cases.
The viral NSs protein disrupts interferon signaling by sequestering key host proteins.
Abstract
Severe fever with thrombocytopenia syndrome virus (SFTSV) is an emerging tick-borne Dabie bandavirus that causes hemorrhagic fever with high case fatality. Although numerous studies have examined specific aspects of SFTSV infection, an integrated framework that links viral immune cell tropism to immunopathogenesis remains lacking. The virus exhibits broad immune tropism, particularly infecting monocytes and B cells, which serve as major viral reservoirs and sources of inflammatory cytokines, while B cells additionally show impaired antibody production. T cells undergo numerical depletion and functional exhaustion, and dendritic cells lose antigen-presenting capacity in severe cases. Natural killer cells and macrophages also exhibit altered activation and polarization, contributing to both antiviral defense and immunopathology. A key viral protein, NSs, antagonizes host interferon…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Virus Infections Studies · Viral Infections and Immunology Research · Viral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology
