Identification of an infectious progenitor for the multiple-copy HERV-K human endogenous retroelements

  1. Marie Dewannieux1,3,
  2. Francis Harper2,4,
  3. Aurélien Richaud1,4,
  4. Claire Letzelter1,
  5. David Ribet1,
  6. Gérard Pierron2, and
  7. Thierry Heidmann1,5
  1. 1 Unité des Rétrovirus Endogènes et Eléments Rétroïdes des Eucaryotes Supérieurs, UMR 8122 CNRS, Institut Gustave Roussy, 94805 Villejuif Cedex, France;
  2. 2 Laboratoire de Réplication de l’ADN et Ultrastructure du Noyau, UPR1983 Institut André Lwoff, 94801 Villejuif Cedex, France
  1. 4 These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract

Human Endogenous Retroviruses are expected to be the remnants of ancestral infections of primates by active retroviruses that have thereafter been transmitted in a Mendelian fashion. Here, we derived in silico the sequence of the putative ancestral “progenitor” element of one of the most recently amplified family—the HERV-K family—and constructed it. This element, Phoenix, produces viral particles that disclose all of the structural and functional properties of a bona-fide retrovirus, can infect mammalian, including human, cells, and integrate with the exact signature of the presently found endogenous HERV-K progeny. We also show that this element amplifies via an extracellular pathway involving reinfection, at variance with the non-LTR-retrotransposons (LINEs, SINEs) or LTR-retrotransposons, thus recapitulating ex vivo the molecular events responsible for its dissemination in the host genomes. We also show that in vitro recombinations among present-day human HERV-K (also known as ERVK) loci can similarly generate functional HERV-K elements, indicating that human cells still have the potential to produce infectious retroviruses.

Footnotes

  • 3 Present address: Department of Immunology and Molecular Pathology, University College of London, Windeyer Institute, London W1T 4JF, UK.

  • 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.5565706

    • Received May 28, 2006.
    • Accepted August 30, 2006.
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