Mobilization of endogenous retroviruses in mice after infection with an exogenous retrovirus

LH Evans, ASM Alamgir, N Owens, N Weber… - Journal of …, 2009 - Am Soc Microbiol
LH Evans, ASM Alamgir, N Owens, N Weber, K Virtaneva, K Barbian, A Babar, F Malik…
Journal of virology, 2009Am Soc Microbiol
Mammalian genomes harbor a large number of retroviral elements acquired as germ line
insertions during evolution. Although many of the endogenous retroviruses are defective,
several contain one or more intact viral genes that are expressed under certain
physiological or pathological conditions. This is true of the endogenous polytropic
retroviruses that generate recombinant polytropic murine leukemia viruses (MuLVs). In these
recombinants the env gene sequences of exogenous ecotropic MuLVs are replaced with …
Abstract
Mammalian genomes harbor a large number of retroviral elements acquired as germ line insertions during evolution. Although many of the endogenous retroviruses are defective, several contain one or more intact viral genes that are expressed under certain physiological or pathological conditions. This is true of the endogenous polytropic retroviruses that generate recombinant polytropic murine leukemia viruses (MuLVs). In these recombinants the env gene sequences of exogenous ecotropic MuLVs are replaced with env gene sequences from an endogenous polytropic retrovirus. Although replication-competent endogenous polytropic retroviruses have not been observed, the recombinant polytropic viruses are capable of replicating in numerous species. Recombination occurs during reverse transcription of a virion RNA heterodimer comprised of an RNA transcript from an endogenous polytropic virus and an RNA transcript from an exogenous ecotropic MuLV RNA. It is possible that homodimers corresponding to two full-length endogenous RNA genomes are also packaged. Thus, infection by an exogenous virus may result not only in recombination with endogenous sequences, but also in the mobilization of complete endogenous retrovirus genomes via pseudotyping within exogenous retroviral virions. We report that the infection of mice with an ecotropic virus results in pseudotyping of intact endogenous viruses that have not undergone recombination. The endogenous retroviruses infect and are integrated into target cell genomes and subsequently replicate and spread as pseudotyped viruses. The mobilization of endogenous retroviruses upon infection with an exogenous retrovirus may represent a major interaction of exogenous retroviruses with endogenous retroviruses and may have profound effects on the pathogenicity of retroviral infections.
American Society for Microbiology