Gorillas have been infected with the HERV-K (HML-2) endogenous retrovirus much more recently than humans and chimpanzees

Joseph R. Holloway(Tufts University), Zachary H. Williams(Tufts University), Michael Freeman(Tufts University), Uriel Bulow(Tufts University), John M. Coffin(Tufts University)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
January 4, 2019
Cited by 43Open Access
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Abstract

Human endogenous retrovirus-K (HERV-K) human mouse mammary tumor virus-like 2 (HML-2) is the most recently active endogenous retrovirus group in humans, and the only group with human-specific proviruses. HML-2 expression is associated with cancer and other diseases, but extensive searches have failed to reveal any replication-competent proviruses in humans. However, HML-2 proviruses are found throughout the catarrhine primates, and it is possible that they continue to infect some species today. To investigate this possibility, we searched for gorilla-specific HML-2 elements using both in silico data mining and targeted deep-sequencing approaches. We identified 150 gorilla-specific integrations, including 31 2-LTR proviruses. Many of these proviruses have identical LTRs, and are insertionally polymorphic, consistent with very recent integration. One identified provirus has full-length ORFs for all genes, and thus could potentially be replication-competent. We suggest that gorillas may still harbor infectious HML-2 virus and could serve as a model for understanding retrovirus evolution and pathogenesis in humans.


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