The decline of human endogenous retroviruses_英文文献资料.pdf

The decline of human endogenous retroviruses_英文文献资料.pdf

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Magiorkinis et al. Retrovirology (2015) 12:8 DOI 10.1186/s12977-015-0136-x RESEARCH Open Access The decline of human endogenous retroviruses: extinction and survival Gkikas Magiorkinis1,2,3, Daniel Blanco-Melo4 and Robert Belshaw5* Abstract Background: Endogenous Retroviruses (ERVs) are retroviruses that over the course of evolution have integrated into germline cells and eventually become part of the host genome. They proliferate within the germline of their host, making up ~5% of the human and mouse genome sequences. Several lines of evidence have suggested a decline in the rate of ERV integration into the human genome in recent evolutionary history but this has not been investigated quantitatively or possible causes explored. Results: By dating the integration of ERV loci in 40 mammal species, we show that the human genome and that of other hominoids (great apes and gibbons) have experienced an approximately four-fold decline in the ERV integration rate over the last 10 million years. A major cause is the recent extinction of one very large ERV lineage (HERV-H), which is responsible for most of the integrations over the last 30 million years. The decline however affects most other ERV lineages. Only about 10% of the decline might be attributed to an accompanying increase in body mass (a trait we have shown recently to be negatively correlated with ERV integration rate). Humans are unusual compared to related species – Old World monkeys, great apes and gibbons – in (a) having not acquired any new ERV lineages during the last 30 million years and (b) the possession of an old ERV lineage that has continued to replicate up until at least the last few hundred thousand years – the potentially medically significant HERVK(HML2). Conclusions: The human genome shares with the genome of other great apes an

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