Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:Q3V6T2 (
ape
)
2,133
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Endogenous DNA sequences related to retroviruses are probably present in all primates. By using approaches based on the polymerase chain reaction, two separate studies have revealed the evolutionary history of some of these sequences. In the first study, a retrovirus-like reverse transcriptase (RT) sequence homologous to that of Baboon endogenous virus (BaEV) has been identified in both Old World monkeys and African apes, but not in humans or Asian apes. This RT sequence is highly conserved at the amino acid level, but not the nucleotide level, in the baboon, African green monkey, Java macaque, chimpanzee, and gorilla. The patterns of nucleotide substitution indicate functional conservation and suggest that this RT sequence was present in the primate germline before apes and Old World monkeys diverged about 30 million years ago. In the second study, a comparison of endogenous proviral DNAs and their adjacent sequences has been used to analyze the evolutionary history of three previously reported human endogenous retroviruses, HERV-E(4.14),
HERV-R
(3), and HERV-Ia. It is shown that these retroviruses have also been resident in the primate line since before the
ape
-Old World monkey divergence. The implications of the presence of functionally conserved RT genes in the germlines of primates, and the potential for using integration sites as tools for analyzing phylogenetic relationships among primates and their retroviruses, are discussed.
...
PMID:Evolutionary implications of primate endogenous retroviruses. 170 32
The human endogenous retrovirus
ERV3
possesses an open reading frame for a truncated envelope, which is expressed as mRNA and protein. Here we examine the env sequence in primates for evidence of evolutionary conservation.
ERV3
sequences were amplified by PCR from genomic DNA of great
ape
and Old World primates but not from New World primates or gorilla, suggesting an integration event more than 30 million years ago with a subsequent loss in one species. In the chimpanzee, the protein sequence of Env is 98.18% identical to that of human. In other species the identity falls (93.71% in rhesus macaque) in proportion to the separation from the human lineage. Start and stop codons and domains of functional significance in the envelope protein are conserved. The evolutionary conservation of the
ERV3
envelope suggests a beneficial function, though the loss from gorilla shows that it is not essential for survival or reproduction.
...
PMID:Conservation and loss of the ERV3 open reading frame in primates. 1508 Nov 24