Yijing Wang, Dingkun Peng, Meilin Li, Meng Yao, Tianlong Li, Su Li, Hua-Ji Qiu, Lian-Feng Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Viral diseases pose serious threats to human health, resulting in substantial economic losses. However, traditional disease models often fail to capture the full complexity of viral pathogenesis. Pluripotent and tissue stem cell-derived organoids help bridge this gap by closely mimicking the structure and function of native organs, thereby enabling new breakthroughs in studying viral pathogenesis. This review discusses the diverse applications of organoid models in virology, including infection modeling, host-virus interaction studies, CRISPR/Cas9-based gene editing, antiviral drug screening, and vaccine development. Here, we focus on human organoid models used to investigate viral infections, covering systemic viral infections (exemplified by viruses such as SARS-CoV-2, Zika virus, influenza virus, and monkeypox virus) as well as localized viral infections (exemplified by viruses including respiratory syncytial virus, herpes simplex virus 1, rotavirus, norovirus, hepatobiliary viruses, and cytomegalovirus). By advancing mechanistic insights and accelerating therapeutic discovery, organoid technology shows significant potential as a complementary tool for combating viral diseases.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Virology (JVI) explores the nature of the viruses of animals, archaea, bacteria, fungi, plants, and protozoa. We welcome papers on virion structure and assembly, viral genome replication and regulation of gene expression, genetic diversity and evolution, virus-cell interactions, cellular responses to infection, transformation and oncogenesis, gene delivery, viral pathogenesis and immunity, and vaccines and antiviral agents.