4.3 Article

Evolutionary dynamics of the human endogenous retrovirus family HERV-K inferred from full-length proviral genomes

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION
Volume 53, Issue 3, Pages 237-243

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG
DOI: 10.1007/s002390010213

Keywords

human endogenous retrovirus; HERV; HML-2; HERV-K; master gene model; retrovirus-like elements; transposable elements; interspersed elements; mosaic evolution

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Several distinct families of endogenous retroviruses exist in the genomes of primates. Most of them are remnants of ancient germ-line infections. The human endogenous retrovirus family HERV-K represents the unique known case of endogenous retrovirus that amplified in the human genome after the divergence of human and chimpanzee lineages. There are two types of HERV-K proviral genomes differing by the presence or absence of 292 bp in the pol-env boundary. Human-specific insertions exist for both types. The analyses shown in the present work reveal that several lineages of type 1 and type 2 HERV-K proviruses remained transpositionally active after the human/chimpanzee split. The data also reflect the important role of mosaic evolution (either by recombination or gene conversion) during the evolutionary history of HERV-K.

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