scienceneutral
The Sly Virus: How Epstein-Barr Manipulates B Cells
GlobalMonday, December 23, 2024
EBV takes advantage of the normal ways B cells change their energy use during an immune response. It makes B cells think they're battling an infection, even when they're not. This forces B cells to use more energy and make new parts to grow. By doing this, EBV can stay hidden and cause long-term infections.
What's interesting is that EBV seems to use different methods than what B cells normally do during a real immune response. Scientists are curious if this means there are specific spots where EBV and B cells connect that could be targeted with new treatments.
Actions
flag content