Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) are the germline embedded proviral fragments of ancient retroviral infections that make up roughly 8% of the human genome. Our understanding of HERVs in physiology primarily surrounds their non-coding functions, while their protein coding capacity remains virtually uncharacterized. Therefore, we applied the bioinformatic pipeline “hervQuant” to high-resolution ribosomal profiling of healthy tissues to provide a comprehensive overview of translationally active HERVs. We find that HERVs account for 0.1–0.4% of all translation in distinct tissue-specific profiles. Collectively, our study further supports claims that HERVs are actively translated throughout healthy tissues to provide sequences of retroviral origin to the human proteome.
CITATION STYLE
Dopkins, N., Singh, B., Michael, S., Zhang, P., Marston, J. L., Fei, T., … Nixon, D. F. (2024). Ribosomal profiling of human endogenous retroviruses in healthy tissues. BMC Genomics, 25(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-023-09909-x
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