Human Endogenous Retroviruses and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome: Emerging Insights into Their Role in Disease Pathogenesis, Immune Dysregulation, and as Potential Biomarkers and Therapeutic Targets
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Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) are potential driving forces of the pathophysiology of Myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS), linking post-infectious immune dysfunction to chronic inflammation and immune and neurocognitive dysfunction that are hallmark features of ME/CFS. Accumulating evidence from related autoimmune diseases and cancers has shown that reactivated HERVs can contribute to disease pathogenesis by amplifying immune activation through viral protein-mediated innate sensing, Long Terminal Repeat (LTR)-driven transcription, and disrupting epigenetic silencing. HERV signatures are therefore promising biomarkers for diagnosis, patient stratification for drug-repurposing trials, and therapy monitoring. Accumulating evidence suggests a possible correlation between HERV expression and ME/CFS symptom severity, alterations of immune phenotypes, function and inflammatory gene networks. Importantly, locus-specific HERV profiling is a promising approach for distinguishing ME/CFS from overlapping or co-morbid conditions and healthy controls. Furthermore, HERV-targeted antibodies, immune modulators, epigenetic and antiviral interventions offer promise as concomitant therapeutic strategies for ME/CFS. Additional research incorporating viromics and other-omics validation, functional assays, and HERV-stratified clinical trials is now needed to realise this potential and to transform ME/CFS from a symptom-based syndrome into a mechanism-driven, treatable condition.