Molecular characterization of the Akvr-1 restriction gene: a defective endogenous retrovirus-borne gene identical to Fv-4r

  • Dandekar S
  • Rossitto P
  • Pickett S
  • et al.
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Abstract

A dominant restriction allele, Akvr-1r, from California wild mice (Mus musculus domesticus) confers resistance to exogenous ecotropic murine leukemia virus (MuLV) infection. The presence of an ecotropic MuLV envelope-related glycoprotein in uninfected virus-resistant cells suggests that viral interference is a possible mechanism for this resistance. We molecularly cloned the ecotropic MuLV envelope-related sequence from the genomic DNA of a wild mouse homozygous for the Akvr-1r locus. The cloned provirus was defective and contained a C-terminal end of the pol gene, a complete envelope gene, and a 3' long terminal repeat. The presence of this provirus was directly correlated with Akvr-1r-mediated virus resistance in cell cultures and hybrid mice. The Akvr-1r provirus restriction map and partial DNA sequence were identical to those of the Fv-4r allele, an ecotropic MuLV resistance locus from Japanese feral mice (M. musculus molossinus), which was previously shown to be allelic with the Akvr-1r gene. The 3' host flanking sequences of Fv-4r and Akvr-1r also had identical restriction maps. These findings indicate that Akvr-1r and Fv-4r are the same gene. It was probably acquired by interbreeding of these feral species in recent times. Conservation of this locus might be favored by the useful function that it performs in protection against ecotropic MuLV infection endemic in both populations of wild mice.

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Dandekar, S., Rossitto, P., Pickett, S., Mockli, G., Bradshaw, H., Cardiff, R., & Gardner, M. (1987). Molecular characterization of the Akvr-1 restriction gene: a defective endogenous retrovirus-borne gene identical to Fv-4r. Journal of Virology, 61(2), 308–314. https://doi.org/10.1128/jvi.61.2.308-314.1987

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