Herpesviruses and Their Associated Diseases: From Disease Onset to Therapy
A special issue of Microorganisms (ISSN 2076-2607). This special issue belongs to the section "Medical Microbiology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2023) | Viewed by 17128
Special Issue Editor
Interests: gene; infectious diseases; herpesviruses; pharmacology and toxicology; molecular medicine; oncology and hematology; cardiovascular diseases; natural products; drug discovery; analytical and bioanalytical techniques
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Throughout human history, herpesvirus infections remain some of the most significant diseases that threaten human health. During a deep history of coevolution, herpesviruses have formed a fine-tuned equilibrium with their hosts, enabling them to persist and propagate to new hosts. Herpesviruses belong to the family of Herpesviridae, which is a large family of DNA viruses. Herpesviruses are known to infect humans and animals and share the feature of creating lifelong infections in a latent phase with the potential of periodic reactivation. So far, there are eight herpesvirus types known to infect humans, generating serious diseases. These viruses may also affect susceptibility to other infections and disease-producing agents. Recognizing and investigating the factors that affect herpesvirus infection of different cells and tissues will advance to be an area of intensive research. Understanding virus–host interaction will result in new antiviral drugs focused against both viral and cellular targets, and, as virus research has always done, share novel insights into cell biology.
In this Special Issue, we invite the submission of original research papers, communications, reviews, methods articles, and perspectives that cover virus–host interaction in various animal species, including humans. We also welcome research focusing on factors that affect disease development, such as virus–environmental conditions interaction and host–environmental conditions interaction, as well as complications resulting from infections that include herpesvirus-mediated illness complexes in different animal host species. Additionally, papers that provide strategies for future vaccine development and new anti-herpesvirus drugs are also encouraged.
Dr. Sherif T.S. Hassan
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- Human herpesviruses
- Animal herpesviruses
- Isolation and Identification techniques
- Virus–host interaction
- Virus–environmental conditions interaction
- Host–environmental conditions interaction
- Herpesviruses-associated diseases
- Vaccine development
- Anti-herpesvirus drug development
- Drug resistance
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