The Immunologic Basis for Severe Neonatal Herpes Disease and Potential Strategies for Therapeutic Intervention
Open Access
- 31 March 2013
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Hindawi Limited in Clinical and Developmental Immunology
- Vol. 2013, 1-16
- https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/369172
Abstract
Herpes simplex viruses types 1 and 2 (HSV-1 and HSV-2) infect a large proportion of the world’s population. Infection is life-long and can cause periodic mucocutaneous symptoms, but it only rarely causes life-threatening disease among immunocompetent children and adults. However, when HSV infection occurs during the neonatal period, viral replication is poorly controlled and a large proportion of infants die or develop disability even with optimal antiviral therapy. Increasingly, specific differences are being elucidated between the immune system of newborns and those of older children and adults, which predispose to severe infections and reflect the transition from fetal to postnatal life. Studies in healthy individuals of different ages, individuals with primary or acquired immunodeficiencies, and animal models have contributed to our understanding of the mechanisms that control HSV infection and how these may be impaired during the neonatal period. This paper outlines our current understanding of innate and adaptive immunity to HSV infection, immunologic differences in early infancy that may account for the manifestations of neonatal HSV infection, and the potential of interventions to augment neonatal immune protection against HSV disease.Keywords
This publication has 231 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pregnancy imprints regulatory memory that sustains anergy to fetal antigenNature, 2012
- Cross-talk between myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC), macrophages, and dendritic cells enhances tumor-induced immune suppressionSeminars in Cancer Biology, 2012
- Extrathymic Generation of Regulatory T Cells in Placental Mammals Mitigates Maternal-Fetal ConflictCell, 2012
- On the armament and appearances of human myeloid-derived suppressor cellsClinical Immunology, 2012
- The biology of myeloid‐derived suppressor cells: The blessing and the curse of morphological and functional heterogeneityEuropean Journal of Immunology, 2010
- Human TRAF3 Adaptor Molecule Deficiency Leads to Impaired Toll-like Receptor 3 Response and Susceptibility to Herpes Simplex EncephalitisImmunity, 2010
- Construction and properties of a herpes simplex virus 2 dl5-29 vaccine candidate strain encoding an HSV-1 virion host shutoff proteinVaccine, 2010
- Liposomal gD ectodomain (gD1–306) vaccine protects against HSV2 genital or rectal infection of female and male miceVaccine, 2009
- CD8+ T lymphocyte mobilization to virus-infected tissue requires CD4+ T-cell helpNature, 2009
- Toll-like receptors in control of immunological autophagyCell Death & Differentiation, 2009