Pre-Cambrian origin of envelope-carrying retrotransposons in metazoans

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Abstract

Retrotransposons or endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) essentially carry open reading frames of gag and pol, which are utilized to selfishly replicate themselves in the host germline genome. One rare example of ERVs that additionally carry envelope genes, are Ty3/gypsy errantiviruses in Drosophila. Though they are structurally analogous to retroviruses, their evolutionary relationship as well as the origin of envelope genes remain elusive. We systematically searched for intact envelope-containing ERVs that are homologous to Ty3/gypsy in invertebrate metazoan genomes and found that they are widespread across taxa including ancient animals such as cnidarians, ctenophores and tunicates. Most elements are multiplied in their respective genomes, implying recent germline expansion. envelope genes are classified into those that resemble glycoprotein F from paramyxoviruses and glycoprotein B from herpesviruses, and both types are equally abundant and widespread. Phylogenetic and structural analyses revealed that envelope genes have largely diverged with pol genes as well as with the host organisms throughout their evolutionary history and recombined infrequently, suggesting that the envelope acquisition to ERVs is ancient and likely dates to before the split of bilaterian and non-bilaterian animals in Pre-Cambrian era.

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