TY - JOUR AB - Respiratory infections with newly emerging zoonotic viruses such as SARS-CoV-2, the etiological agent of COVID-19, often lead to the perturbation of the human innate and adaptive immune responses causing severe disease with high mortality. The responsible mechanisms are commonly virus-specific and often include either over-activated or delayed local interferon responses, which facilitate efficient viral replication in the primary target organ, systemic viral spread, and rapid onset of organ-specific and harmful inflammatory responses. Despite the distinct replication strategies, human infections with SARS-CoV-2 and highly pathogenic avian influenza viruses demonstrate remarkable similarities and differences regarding the mechanisms of immune induction, disease dynamics, as well as the long-term sequelae, which will be discussed in this review. In addition, we will highlight some important lessons about the effectiveness of antiviral and immunomodulatory therapeutic strategies that this pandemic has taught us. AU - Faist, Aileen AU - Janowski, Josua AU - Kumar, Sriram AU - Hinse, Saskia AU - Çalışkan, Duygu Merve AU - Lange, Julius AU - Ludwig, Stephan AU - Brunotte, Linda DA - 2022-07-14 DO - 10.17879/12099501681 KW - Systemische Entzündung KW - Virusinfektion KW - COVID-19 KW - hochpathogene aviäre Influenzaviren KW - Immunantwort KW - systemic inflammation KW - viral infection KW - highly pathogenic avian influenza KW - immune response LA - eng N1 - Cells 11 (2022) 14, 2198, 1-31 N1 - Förderer: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft / Projektnummer: 414847370 N1 - Funding organisation: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft / Project number: 414847370 PY - 2022-07-14 TI - Virus Infection and Systemic Inflammation: Lessons Learnt from COVID-19 and Beyond UR - https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:hbz:6-12099492019 Y2 - 2024-11-24T18:16:37 ER -