Pacific Northwest Research Institute, Seattle, United States.
Division of Human Biology, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, United States.
Elife. 2020 Jun 1;9:e58436. doi: 10.7554/eLife.58436.
Host-virus arms races are inherently asymmetric; viruses evolve much more rapidly than host genomes. Thus, there is high interest in discovering mechanisms by which host genomes keep pace with rapidly evolving viruses. One family of restriction factors, the cytidine deaminases, has undergone positive selection and expansion via segmental gene duplication and recombination. Here, we show that new copies of genes have also been created in primates by reverse transcriptase-encoding elements like LINE-1 or endogenous retroviruses via a process termed retrocopying. First, we discovered that all simian primate genomes retain the remnants of an ancient retrocopy: . Furthermore, we found that some New World monkeys encode up to ten additional () retrocopies. Some of these retrocopies are transcribed in a variety of tissues and able to restrict retroviruses. Our findings suggest that host genomes co-opt retroelement activity in the germline to create new host restriction factors as another means to keep pace with the rapid evolution of viruses. (163).
宿主-病毒军备竞赛本质上是不对称的;病毒的进化速度远远快于宿主基因组。因此,人们非常关注发现宿主基因组如何跟上快速进化的病毒的机制。一类限制因子,胞嘧啶脱氨酶,通过片段基因重复和重组经历了正选择和扩张。在这里,我们通过一种称为 retrocopying 的过程表明,新的 基因副本也已通过逆转录酶编码元件(如 LINE-1 或内源性逆转录病毒)在灵长类动物中产生。首先,我们发现所有灵长类动物基因组都保留了一个古老的 retrocopy 的残余物: 。此外,我们发现一些新世界猴编码多达十个额外的 ()retrocopies。这些 retrocopies 中的一些在各种组织中被转录,并能够限制逆转录病毒。我们的发现表明,宿主基因组在生殖系中利用逆转录元件的活性来创造新的宿主限制因子,作为跟上病毒快速进化的另一种手段。(163)。