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Photo of Jonas Klingström

Jonas Klingström

Professor

Our research aims to understand the mechanisms behind how zoonotic viruses cause disease in humans. More specifically, we focus on how hantavirus and coronavirus modulate inflammatory responses and cell-cell-signaling.

Understanding the pathogenesis of zoonotic viruses

Our research aims to understand the mechanisms behind how zoonotic viruses cause disease in humans. More specifically, we focus on how hantavirus and coronavirus modulate inflammatory responses and cell-cell-signaling. Ultimately, our goal is to contribute to the development of specific treatment for patients.

Zoonotic viruses are viruses that can be transmitted between animals and humans. Hantaviruses are zoonotic viruses that are transmitted to humans via rodent excreta. The main focus of our research is to understand how hantaviruses cause disease in humans. Depending on the virus strain, hantaviruses can cause two severe diseases in humans - hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS), in Europe and Asia, and hantavirus pulmonary syndrome (HPS) in the Americas. HFRS and HPS both give rise to acute flu-like illness with fever, headache, and stomachache as common symptoms. HFRS often causes a transient renal dysfunction while HPS primarily affects the lungs and can rapidly progress into life-threatening lung failure. In contrast to HFRS, which is seldom fatal, HPS has a case-fatality rate of up to 40%. The mechanisms behind how hantaviruses cause disease are unknown and no FDA/EMA-approved hantavirus vaccine or treatment exists.

Upon infection, hantavirus spreads systemically via endothelial cells. Hallmarks of HFRS and HPS include strong inflammatory responses and increased vascular permeability. Using blood samples from HFRS/HPS patients and in vitro infection models, we try to identify key mechanisms behind how hantaviruses cause inflammation in humans, and the consequences of this inflammation. Mapping of the human immune response to hantavirus allows us to search for immunological factors that are associated with disease severity and fatality. To explore the mechanisms behind these findings, we re-capitulate these responses using in vitro infection models with primary endothelial cells and immune cells. Moreover, by comparing the effects of different hantaviruses of varying pathogenicities, we can identify disease-driving pathways.


Publications

Latest publications in LiU DiVA

2025

John H-O Pettersson, Erica Tibbelin, Gabriel Heyman, Johan Aarum, Oskar Karlsson Lindsjo, Kim Blom, Klara Sonden, Jonas Klingström (2025) Journal of Travel Medicine (Article in journal)
Eva Mittler, Alexandra L. Tse, Pham-Tue-Hung Tran, Catalina Florez, Javier Janer, Renata Varnaite, Ezgi Kasikci, M. V. Vasantha Kumar, Michaela Loomis, Wanda Christ, Erik Cazares, Russell R. Bakken, Caroline K. Martin, Xiankun Zeng, Jo Lynne Raymond, Mansoureh Shahsavani, Sara Khanal, Eric R. Wilkinson, Rischa Maya Oktavia, Megan M. Slough, Denise Haslwanter, Julianna Han, Jacob Berrigan, Ebba Rosendal, Margaret Kielian, Balaji Manicassamy, Anna K. Overby, Anna Falk, Giovanna Barba-Spaeth, Felix A. Rey, Jonas Klingström, Evripidis Gavathiotis, Andrew S. Herbert, Kartik Chandran, Sara Gredmark-Russ (2025) Nature (Article in journal)
Ulrika Marking, Oscar Bladh, Katherina Aguilera, Tamas Pongracz, Sebastian Havervall, Nina Greilert-Norin, Kim Blom, Jonas Klingström, Yunzhang Wang, Mikael Aberg, Charlotte Thalin (2025) EBioMedicine, Vol. 120, Article 105912 (Article in journal)
Aleksandra Pettke, Marton Keszei, Wanda Christ, Nuria Mayola Danes, Sara Gredmark-Russ, Sandra Soderholm, Finn Filen, Elisabet Storgard, Victor Westergren, Victor Yman, Johan Aarum, Jonas Klingström, Kari Johansen, Anna Mia Ekstrom, Klara Sonden (2025) Microbiology Spectrum (Article in journal)
Emma Lofstrom, Anna Eringfalt, Arne Kotz, Wanda Christ, Stefan Kunkel, Johan Tham, Jonas Klingström, Johan Unden (2025) Advances in Virology, Vol. 2025, Article 2265813 (Article in journal)

Organisation