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AdvisoryPublished Jun 1 · 2026AI-classified · awaiting human verification

How our immune cells combat Andes hantavirus – lji.org

Read original atlji.org

La Jolla, California, United StatesConfidence 85%Jun 1, 2026

Scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology are researching how B cells combat Andes hantavirus, highlighting the critical need for new antiviral therapies and vaccines due to the strong immune response observed.

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  • Primary
    How our immune cells combat Andes hantavirus – lji.org

    lji.org · 2026-06-01

    Scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) are researching how the immune system's B cells respond to Andes hantavirus, which recently caused an outbreak on the M/V Hondius cruise ship. Their findings show that hantaviruses can stimulate a strong B cell response, producing antibodies. The research highlights the critical need for new antiviral therapies and vaccines, as there are currently no specific treatments for hantavirus species in the Americas.

  • Reference
    How our immune cells combat Andes hantavirus – lji.org

    vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com · 2026-06-01

    Scientists at La Jolla Institute for Immunology are researching how the immune system's B cells respond to Andes hantavirus, which recently caused an outbreak on the MV Hondius cruise ship. Andes hantavirus, first identified in Argentina in 1995, is unique for its person-to-person transmission and continues to cause periodic outbreaks in Argentina. The cruise ship outbreak is believed to have originated from an elderly couple exposed during a birdwatching tour in South America, including Argentina.

  • Reference
    How our immune cells combat Andes hantavirus – lji.org

    vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com · 2026-06-01

    An article from lji.org on May 26, 2026, discusses how immune cells combat the Andes hantavirus, particularly in the context of the MV Hondius cruise ship outbreak. Researchers at La Jolla Institute for Immunology (LJI) are studying immune responses to develop new antiviral therapies and vaccines. The Andes hantavirus, first identified in Argentina in 1995, is unique among hantaviruses for its person-to-person transmission capability and continues to cause periodic outbreaks in Argentina.

Reminder

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