4.8 Article

Convergent evolution of antiviral machinery derived from endogenous retrovirus truncated envelope genes in multiple species

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2114441119

Keywords

antiviral; retrovirus; receptor; restriction factor; evolution

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI [20H03152, 20K06775]

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Host genetic resistance to viral infection controls the pathogenicity and epidemic dynamics of infectious diseases. Refrex-1 is a restriction factor that counteracts infection by feline leukemia virus subgroup D and domestic cat endogenous retroviruses. It competes for the entry receptor CTR1 and also shows antiviral effects against primate endogenous retroviruses. Additionally, truncated envelope genes found in various mammalian species can block infection by retroviruses. These findings highlight the convergent evolution of antiviral mechanisms acquired from ancient retroviruses.
Host genetic resistance to viral infection controls the pathogenicity and epidemic dynamics of infectious diseases. Refrex-1 is a restriction factor against feline leukemia virus subgroup D (FeLV-D) and an endogenous retrovirus (ERV) in domestic cats (ERV-DC). Refrex-1 is encoded by a subset of ERV-DC loci with truncated envelope genes and secreted from cells as a soluble protein. Here, we identified the copper transporter CTR1 as the entry receptor for FeLV-D and genotype I ERV-DCs. We also identified CTR1 as a receptor for primate ERVs from crab-eating macaques and rhesus macaques, which were found in a search of intact envelope genes capable of forming infectious viruses. Refrex-1 counteracted infection by FeLV-D and ERV-DCs via competition for the entry receptor CTR1; the antiviral effects extended to primate ERVs with CTR1-dependent entry. Furthermore, truncated ERV envelope genes found in chimpanzee, bonobo, gorilla, crab-eating macaque, and rhesus macaque genomes could also block infection by feline and primate retroviruses. Genetic analyses showed that these ERV envelope genes were acquired in a species- or genus-specific manner during host evolution. These results indicated that soluble envelope proteins could suppress retroviral infection across species boundaries, suggesting that they function to control retroviral spread. Our findings revealed that several mammalian species acquired antiviral machinery from various ancient retroviruses, leading to convergent evolution for host defense.

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