Natural history of the ERVWE1 endogenous retroviral locus

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Abstract

Background: The human HERV-W multicopy family includes a unique proviral locus, termed ERVWE1, whose full-length envelope ORF was preserved through evolution by the action of a selective pressure. The encoded Env protein (Syncytin) is involved in hominoid placental physiology. Results: In order to infer the natural history of this domestication process, a comparative genomic analysis of the human 7q21.2 syntenic regions in eutherians was performed. In primates, this region was progressively colonized by LTR-elements, leading to two different evolutionary pathways in Cercopithecidae and Hominidae, a genetic drift versus a domestication, respectively. Conclusions: The preservation in Hominoids of a genomic structure consisting in the juxtaposition of a retrotransposon-derived MaLR LTR and the ERVWE1 provirus suggests a functional link between both elements. © 2005 Bonnaud et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Bonnaud, B., Beliaeff, J., Bouton, O., Oriol, G., Duret, L., & Mallet, F. (2005). Natural history of the ERVWE1 endogenous retroviral locus. Retrovirology, 2. https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-4690-2-57

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