The retrotransposon <i>-</i> derived capsid genes <i>PNMA1</i> and <i>PNMA4</i> maintain reproductive capacity

Thomas W.P. Wood(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), William S. Henriques(Montana State University), Harrison B. Cullen(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Mayra Romero(Institute of Human Genetics), Cecilia S. Blengini(Institute of Human Genetics), Shreya Sarathy(Institute of Human Genetics), Julia Sorkin(Institute of Human Genetics), Hilina Bekele(Yale University), Chen Jin(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Seungsoo Kim(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Alexei Chemiakine(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Rishad Khondker(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), José V.V. Isola(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Michael B. Stout(Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation), Vincenzo A. Gennarino(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Binyam Mogessie(Yale University), Devanshi Jain(Institute of Human Genetics), Karen Schindler(Institute of Human Genetics), Yousin Suh(Columbia University Irving Medical Center), Blake Wiedenheft(Montana State University), Luke E. Berchowitz(Columbia University Irving Medical Center)
bioRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory)
May 14, 2024
Cited by 0Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

ABSTRACT The human genome contains 24 gag -like capsid genes derived from deactivated retrotransposons conserved among eutherians. Although some of their encoded proteins retain the ability to form capsids and even transfer cargo, their fitness benefit has remained elusive. Here we show that the gag -like genes PNMA1 and PNMA4 support reproductive capacity. Six-week-old mice lacking either Pnma1 or Pnma4 are indistinguishable from wild-type littermates, but by six months the mutant mice become prematurely subfertile, with precipitous drops in sex hormone levels, gonadal atrophy, and abdominal obesity; overall they produce markedly fewer offspring than controls. Analysis of donated human ovaries shows that expression of both genes declines normally with aging, while several PNMA1 and PNMA4 variants identified in genome-wide association studies are causally associated with low testosterone, altered puberty onset, or obesity. These findings expand our understanding of factors that maintain human reproductive health and lend insight into the domestication of retrotransposon-derived genes.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis