ID | 116026 |
Title Alternative | Transcriptional Regulation of Infectious Feline ERVs
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Author |
Kuse, Kyohei
Yamaguchi University
Ito, Jumpei
Yamaguchi University
Kawasaki, Junna
Yamaguchi University
Watanabe, Shinya
Yamaguchi University
Makundi, Isaac
Yamaguchi University
Ngo, Minh Ha
Yamaguchi University
Otoi, Takeshige
Tokushima University
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Nishigaki, Kazuo
Yamaguchi University
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Content Type |
Journal Article
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Description | Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are the remnants of ancient retroviral infections of germ cells. Previous work identified one of the youngest feline ERV groups, ERV-DC, and reported that two ERV-DC loci, ERV-DC10 and ERV-DC18 (ERV-DC10/DC18), can replicate in cultured cells. Here, we identified another replication-competent provirus, ERV-DC14, on chromosome C1q32. ERV-DC14 differs from ERV-DC10/DC18 in its phylogeny, receptor usage, and, most notably, transcriptional activities; although ERV-DC14 can replicate in cultured cells, it cannot establish a persistent infection owing to its low transcriptional activity. Furthermore, we examined ERV-DC transcription and its regulation in feline tissues. Quantitative reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR) detected extremely low ERV-DC10 expression levels in feline tissues, and bisulfite sequencing showed that 5′ long terminal repeats (LTRs) of ERV-DC10/DC18 are significantly hypermethylated in feline blood cells. Reporter assays found that the 5′-LTR promoter activities of ERV-DC10/DC18 are high, whereas that of ERV-DC14 is low. This difference in promoter activity is due to a single substitution from A to T in the LTR, and reverse mutation at this nucleotide in ERV-DC14 enhanced its replication and enabled it to persistently infect cultured cells. Therefore, ERV-DC LTRs can be divided into two types based on this nucleotide, the A type or T type, which have strong or attenuated promoter activity, respectively. Notably, ERV-DCs with T-type LTRs, such as ERV-DC14, have expanded in the cat genome significantly more than A-type ERV-DCs, despite their low promoter activities. Our results provide insights into how the host controls potentially infectious ERVs and, conversely, how ERVs adapt to and invade the host genome.
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Journal Title |
Journal of Virology
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ISSN | 10985514
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Publisher | American Society for Microbiology
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Volume | 90
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Issue | 20
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Start Page | 9029
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End Page | 9045
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Published Date | 2016-09-29
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DOI (Published Version) | |
URL ( Publisher's Version ) | |
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language |
eng
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TextVersion |
Publisher
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departments |
Medical Sciences
Bioscience and Bioindustry
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