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Human-Specific Endogenous Retroviruses

This review focuses on a small family of human-specific genomic repetitive elements, presented by 134 members that shaped ~330 kb of the human DNA. Although modest in terms of its copy number, this group appeared to modify the human genome activity by endogenizing ~50 functional copies of viral gene...

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Autor principal: Buzdin, Anton
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: TheScientificWorldJOURNAL 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5901341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18060323
http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2007.270
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author Buzdin, Anton
author_facet Buzdin, Anton
author_sort Buzdin, Anton
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description This review focuses on a small family of human-specific genomic repetitive elements, presented by 134 members that shaped ~330 kb of the human DNA. Although modest in terms of its copy number, this group appeared to modify the human genome activity by endogenizing ~50 functional copies of viral genes that may have important implications in the immune response, cancer progression, and antiretroviral host defense. A total of 134 potential promoters and enhancers have been added to the human DNA, about 50% of them in the close gene vicinity and 22% in gene introns. For 60 such human-specific promoters, their activity was confirmed by in vivo assays, with the transcriptional level varying ~1000-fold from hardly detectable to as high as ~3% of β-actin transcript level. New polyadenylation signals have been provided to four human RNAs, and a number of potential antisense regulators of known human genes appeared due to human-specific retroviral insertional activity. This information is given here in the context of other major genomic changes underlining differences between human and chimpanzee DNAs. Finally, a comprehensive database, is available for download, of human-specific and polymorphic endogenous retroviruses is presented, which encompasses the data on their genomic localization, primary structure, encoded viral genes, human gene neighborhood, transcriptional activity, and methylation status.
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spelling pubmed-59013412018-06-03 Human-Specific Endogenous Retroviruses Buzdin, Anton ScientificWorldJournal Review Article This review focuses on a small family of human-specific genomic repetitive elements, presented by 134 members that shaped ~330 kb of the human DNA. Although modest in terms of its copy number, this group appeared to modify the human genome activity by endogenizing ~50 functional copies of viral genes that may have important implications in the immune response, cancer progression, and antiretroviral host defense. A total of 134 potential promoters and enhancers have been added to the human DNA, about 50% of them in the close gene vicinity and 22% in gene introns. For 60 such human-specific promoters, their activity was confirmed by in vivo assays, with the transcriptional level varying ~1000-fold from hardly detectable to as high as ~3% of β-actin transcript level. New polyadenylation signals have been provided to four human RNAs, and a number of potential antisense regulators of known human genes appeared due to human-specific retroviral insertional activity. This information is given here in the context of other major genomic changes underlining differences between human and chimpanzee DNAs. Finally, a comprehensive database, is available for download, of human-specific and polymorphic endogenous retroviruses is presented, which encompasses the data on their genomic localization, primary structure, encoded viral genes, human gene neighborhood, transcriptional activity, and methylation status. TheScientificWorldJOURNAL 2007-11-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5901341/ /pubmed/18060323 http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2007.270 Text en Copyright © 2007 Anton Buzdin. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review Article
Buzdin, Anton
Human-Specific Endogenous Retroviruses
title Human-Specific Endogenous Retroviruses
title_full Human-Specific Endogenous Retroviruses
title_fullStr Human-Specific Endogenous Retroviruses
title_full_unstemmed Human-Specific Endogenous Retroviruses
title_short Human-Specific Endogenous Retroviruses
title_sort human-specific endogenous retroviruses
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5901341/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18060323
http://dx.doi.org/10.1100/tsw.2007.270
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