Cited 18 time in
- Title
- Molecular evolution of the periphilin gene in relation to human endogenous retrovirus M element
- Author(s)
- Jae Won Huh; Tae Hyung Kim; J M Yi; E S Park; W Y Kim; H S Sin; Dae Soo Kim; D S Min; S S Kim; Chang-Bae Kim; Byung Hwa Hyun; S K Kang; J S Jung; W H Lee; O Takenaka; H S Kim
- Bibliographic Citation
- Journal of Molecular Evolution, vol. 62, no. 6, pp. 730-737
- Publication Year
- 2006
- Abstract
- HERV-M (human endogenous retrovirus M), related to the super family of HERV-K, has a methionine (M) tRNA primer-binding site, and is located within the periphilin gene on human chromosome 12q12. HERV-M has been integrated into the periphilin gene as the truncated form, 5′LTR-gag-pol-3′LTR. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) approaches were conducted to investigate its evolutionary origins. Interestingly, the insertion of retroelements in a common ancestor genome can make different transcript variants in different species. In the case of the periphilin gene, human (10 variants) and mouse (2 variants) lineages show different transcript variants. Insertion of HERV-M (variant 1-3) could affect the protein-coding region. Also, Alusq/x (variant 4-9) and L1ME4a (mammalian-wide subfamilies of LINE-1) (variant 10) in humans and SINE (short interspersed repetitive element) and RLTR15 (the mouse putative long terminal repeat) (variant 2) in mice could be driving forces in transcript diversification of the periphilin gene during mammalian evolution. The HERV-M derived transcripts (variant 1-3) were expressed in different human tissues, whereas they were not detected in crab-eating monkey and squirrel monkey tissues by RT-PCR amplification. Taken together, HERV-M seems to have been integrated into our common ancestor genome after the divergence of simians and prosimians, and then was actively expressed during hominoid evolution.
- Keyword
- Driving forcesEvolutionHERV-MPeriphilin gene
- ISSN
- 0022-2844
- Publisher
- Springer
- Full Text Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00239-005-0109-0
- Type
- Article
- Appears in Collections:
- Ochang Branch Institute > Division of National Bio-Infrastructure > National Primate Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
Division of A.I. & Biomedical Research > Digital Biotech Innovation Center > 1. Journal Articles
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