

School Notes
Date posted: Apr 08, 2019
April 8, 2019
Welkin E. Johnson
Nature Reviews Microbiology
Abstract
Retroviruses infect a broad range of vertebrate hosts that includes
amphibians, reptiles, fish, birds and mammals. In addition, a typical
vertebrate genome contains thousands of loci composed of ancient
retroviral sequences known as endogenous retroviruses (ERVs). ERVs are
molecular remnants of ancient retroviruses and proof that the ongoing
relationship between retroviruses and their vertebrate hosts began
hundreds of millions of years ago. The long-term impact of retroviruses
on vertebrate evolution is twofold: first, as with other viruses,
retroviruses act as agents of selection, driving the evolution of host
genes that block viral infection or that mitigate pathogenesis, and
second, through the phenomenon of endogenization, retroviruses
contribute an abundance of genetic novelty to host genomes, including
unique protein-coding genes and cis-acting regulatory elements.
This Review describes ERV origins, their diversity and their
relationships to retroviruses and discusses the potential for ERVs to
reveal virus–host interactions on evolutionary timescales. It also
describes some of the many examples of cellular functions, including
protein-coding genes and regulatory elements, that have evolved from
ERVs. Read more