Search results for "retroviridae"

showing 2 items of 32 documents

Relationships of gag-pol diversity between Ty3/Gypsy and Retroviridae LTR retroelements and the three kings hypothesis

2008

Abstract Background The origin of vertebrate retroviruses (Retroviridae) is yet to be thoroughly investigated, but due to their similarity and identical gag-pol (and env) genome structure, it is accepted that they evolve from Ty3/Gypsy LTR retroelements the retrotransposons and retroviruses of plants, fungi and animals. These 2 groups of LTR retroelements code for 3 proteins rarely studied due to the high variability – gag polyprotein, protease and GPY/F module. In relation to 3 previously proposed Retroviridae classes I, II and II, investigation of the above proteins conclusively uncovers important insights regarding the ancient history of Ty3/Gypsy and Retroviridae LTR retroelements. Resu…

RetroelementsEvolutionSequence analysisvirusesMolecular Sequence DataRetroviridae ProteinsTy3/Gypsy; Retroviridae; LTR retroelements; Gag-polGene Products gagGene Products polSequence alignmentRetrotransposonEvolution MolecularMonophylySequence Analysis ProteinPhylogeneticsbiology.animalQH359-425Amino Acid SequenceRetroviridae ProteinsPhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsGenetics:CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Genética ::Otras [UNESCO]Polymorphism GeneticPhylogenetic treebiologyTerminal Repeat SequencesVertebratefood and beveragesUNESCO::CIENCIAS DE LA VIDA::Genética ::OtrasIsoenzymesGag-polPhenotypeTy3/GypsyRetroviridaeLTR retroelementsSequence AlignmentResearch Article
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The endogenous retroviral insertion in the human complement C4 gene modulates the expression of homologous genes by antisense inhibition

2001

Intron 9 contains the complete endogenous retrovirus HERV-K(C4) as a 6.4-kb insertion in 60% of human C4 genes. The retroviral insertion is in reverse orientation to the C4 coding sequence. Therefore, expression of C4 could lead to the transcription of an antisense RNA, which might protect against exogenous retroviral infections. To test this hypothesis, open reading frames from the HERV sequence were subcloned in sense orientiation into a vector allowing expression of a beta-galactosidase fusion protein. Mouse L cells which had been stably transfected with either the human C4A or C4B gene both carrying the HERV insertion (LC4 cells), and L(Tk-) cells without the C4 gene were transiently tr…

virusesEndogenous RetrovirusesImmunologyIntronEndogenous retrovirusComplement C4TransfectionBiologyMolecular biologyFusion proteinAntisense RNAInterferon-gammaMiceL CellsGene Expression RegulationTranscription (biology)Sense (molecular biology)GeneticsAnimalsHumansRNA AntisenseGeneRetroviridae InfectionsImmunogenetics
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