Evolution and antiviral activity of a human protein of retroviral origin
0303 health sciences
Genome, Human
Placenta
Gene Products, env
Pregnancy Proteins
Betaretrovirus
Placentation
3. Good health
Evolution, Molecular
03 medical and health sciences
Pregnancy
Animals
Humans
Female
DOI:
10.1126/science.abq7871
Publication Date:
2022-10-27T17:58:44Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
Endogenous retroviruses are abundant components of mammalian genomes descended from ancient germline infections. In several mammals, the envelope proteins encoded by these elements protect against exogenous viruses, but this activity has not been documented with endogenously expressed envelopes in humans. We report that the human genome harbors a large pool of envelope-derived sequences with the potential to restrict retroviral infection. To test this, we characterized an envelope-derived protein, Suppressyn. We found that
Suppressyn
is expressed in human preimplantation embryos and developing placenta using its ancestral retroviral promoter. Cell culture assays showed that
Suppressyn
, and its hominoid orthologs, could restrict infection by extant mammalian type D retroviruses. Our data support a generalizable model of retroviral envelope co-option for host immunity and genome defense.
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