Lusso, P, Malnati, M S, Garzino-Demo, A et al. · Nature · 1993 · DOI
This study found that a virus called HHV-6 can directly infect and damage natural killer cells, which are important immune cells that normally fight viruses. When HHV-6 infects these cells, it kills them and also causes them to express a protein that makes them vulnerable to HIV infection. This suggests that HHV-6 might be a way the body's natural antiviral defenses get weakened.
This research is relevant to ME/CFS because both conditions are associated with impaired NK cell function and HHV-6 has been postulated to play a role in ME/CFS pathogenesis. Understanding how HHV-6 directly damages NK cells provides a plausible mechanistic link between viral infection and the immune dysfunction observed in ME/CFS. This work may help explain why some ME/CFS patients have reduced NK cell activity and support investigations into herpesvirus reactivation as a contributing factor.
This in vitro study does not prove that HHV-6 infection causes ME/CFS or that NK cell infection is the primary driver of ME/CFS symptoms. It does not establish the prevalence of HHV-6 infection in NK cells of ME/CFS patients, nor does it demonstrate that this mechanism occurs in vivo with the same efficiency. The study is mechanistic evidence of a possible pathway, not clinical proof of causation.
About the PEM badge: “PEM required” means post-exertional malaise was an explicit required diagnostic criterion for participant inclusion in this study — not that PEM was studied, observed, or discussed. Studies using criteria that do not require PEM (e.g. Fukuda, Oxford) are tagged “PEM not required”. How the atlas works →
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