Thanks to visit codestin.com
Credit goes to genome.cshlp.org

An infectious progenitor for the murine IAP retrotransposon: Emergence of an intracellular genetic parasite from an ancient retrovirus

  1. David Ribet1,2,
  2. Francis Harper3,
  3. Anne Dupressoir1,2,
  4. Marie Dewannieux1,2,4,
  5. Gérard Pierron3, and
  6. Thierry Heidmann1,2,5
  1. 1 Unité des Rétrovirus Endogènes et Eléments Rétroïdes des Eucaryotes Supérieurs, CNRS UMR 8122, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, F-94805, France;
  2. 2 Univ Paris-Sud, Orsay, F-91405, France;
  3. 3 Laboratoire de Réplication de l’ADN et Ultrastructure du Noyau, FRE 2937 Institut André Lwoff, Villejuif, F-94801, France

Abstract

Mammalian genomes contain a high load of mobile elements among which long terminal repeat (LTR)- retrotransposons may represent up to 10% of the genomic DNA. The murine intracisternal A-type particle (IAP) sequences, the prototype of these mammalian “genetic parasites,” have an intracellular replicative life cycle and are responsible for a very large fraction of insertional mutagenesis in mice. Yet, phylogenetic analyses strongly suggest that they derive from an ancestral retrovirus that has reached the germline of a remote rodent ancestor and has been “endogenized.” A genome-wide screening of the mouse genome now has led us to identify the likely progenitor of the intracellular IAP retrotransposons. This identified “living fossil”—that we found to be present only as a single fully active copy—discloses all the characteristics of a bona fide retrovirus, with evidence for particle formation at the cell membrane, and release of virions with a mature morphology that are infectious. We show, by generating appropriate chimeras, that IAPs derive from this element via passive loss of its env gene, and gain of an endoplasmic reticulum targeting signal, resulting in its “intracellularization” and in the gain of transpositional activity. The identification within the mouse genome of the still active retroviral progenitor of the IAP endogenous mobile elements and the experimental dissection of the molecular events responsible for the shift in its life cycle provide a conclusive illustration of the process that has led, during evolution, to the generation of very successful intracellular retrotransposons from ancient retroviruses.

Footnotes

  • 4 Present address: Department of Immunology and Molecular Pathology, University College of London, Windeyer Institute, 46 Cleveland Street, London W1T 4JF, United Kingdom.

  • 5 Corresponding author.

    5 E-mail heidmann{at}igr.fr; fax 33 1-42-11-53-42.

  • [Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]

  • Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.073486.107.

    • Received October 23, 2007.
    • Accepted January 28, 2008.
| Table of Contents

Preprint Server