Deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the Paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian species

Abstract The Deltaretrovirus genus of retroviruses (family Retroviridae) includes the human T cell leukemia viruses and bovine leukemia virus (BLV). Relatively little is known about the biology and evolution of these viruses, because only a few species have been identified and the genomic ‘fossil re...

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Main Authors: Tomáš Hron, Daniel Elleder, Robert J. Gifford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-11-01
Series:Retrovirology
Subjects:
BLV
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12977-019-0495-9
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spelling doaj-e8ff8174d752455897c307f986febfc12020-11-25T02:07:44ZengBMCRetrovirology1742-46902019-11-011611710.1186/s12977-019-0495-9Deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the Paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian speciesTomáš Hron0Daniel Elleder1Robert J. Gifford2Institute of Molecular Genetics of the Czech Academy of SciencesInstitute of Molecular Genetics of the Czech Academy of SciencesMRC-University of Glasgow Centre for Virus ResearchAbstract The Deltaretrovirus genus of retroviruses (family Retroviridae) includes the human T cell leukemia viruses and bovine leukemia virus (BLV). Relatively little is known about the biology and evolution of these viruses, because only a few species have been identified and the genomic ‘fossil record’ is relatively sparse. Here, we report the discovery of multiple novel endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) derived from ancestral deltaretroviruses. These sequences—two of which contain complete or near complete internal coding regions—reside in genomes of several distinct mammalian orders, including bats, carnivores, cetaceans, and insectivores. We demonstrate that two of these ERVs contain unambiguous homologs of the tax gene, indicating that complex gene regulation has ancient origins within the Deltaretrovirus genus. ERVs demonstrate that the host range of the deltaretrovirus genus is much more extensive than suggested by the relatively small number of exogenous deltaretroviruses described so far, and allow the evolutionary timeline of deltaretrovirus-mammal interaction to be more accurately calibrated.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12977-019-0495-9RetrovirusDeltaretrovirusHTLVPTLVBLVEndogenous retrovirus
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tomáš Hron
Daniel Elleder
Robert J. Gifford
spellingShingle Tomáš Hron
Daniel Elleder
Robert J. Gifford
Deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the Paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian species
Retrovirology
Retrovirus
Deltaretrovirus
HTLV
PTLV
BLV
Endogenous retrovirus
author_facet Tomáš Hron
Daniel Elleder
Robert J. Gifford
author_sort Tomáš Hron
title Deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the Paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian species
title_short Deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the Paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian species
title_full Deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the Paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian species
title_fullStr Deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the Paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian species
title_full_unstemmed Deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the Paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian species
title_sort deltaretroviruses have circulated since at least the paleogene and infected a broad range of mammalian species
publisher BMC
series Retrovirology
issn 1742-4690
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract The Deltaretrovirus genus of retroviruses (family Retroviridae) includes the human T cell leukemia viruses and bovine leukemia virus (BLV). Relatively little is known about the biology and evolution of these viruses, because only a few species have been identified and the genomic ‘fossil record’ is relatively sparse. Here, we report the discovery of multiple novel endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) derived from ancestral deltaretroviruses. These sequences—two of which contain complete or near complete internal coding regions—reside in genomes of several distinct mammalian orders, including bats, carnivores, cetaceans, and insectivores. We demonstrate that two of these ERVs contain unambiguous homologs of the tax gene, indicating that complex gene regulation has ancient origins within the Deltaretrovirus genus. ERVs demonstrate that the host range of the deltaretrovirus genus is much more extensive than suggested by the relatively small number of exogenous deltaretroviruses described so far, and allow the evolutionary timeline of deltaretrovirus-mammal interaction to be more accurately calibrated.
topic Retrovirus
Deltaretrovirus
HTLV
PTLV
BLV
Endogenous retrovirus
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12977-019-0495-9
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