Abstract
EnvP(b)1 is an endogenous retroviral envelope gene found in human and other primate genomes. We report EnvP(b)1 sequences in primate genomes consistent with an integration event between 40 and 71 million years ago. Using a highly specific polyclonal antiserum raised against the putative receptor binding domain (RBD) of human EnvP(b)1, we detected expression in human placenta, ovaries, and thymus. We found that EnvP(b)1 is proteolytically processed, and using cell-cell fusion assays in multiple primate cell lines, we demonstrated that extant EnvP(b)1 proteins from a variety of primate genomes are fusogenic. This work supports the idea that EnvP(b)1 is under purifying selection and its fusogenic activity has been maintained for over 40 million years. We determined the structure of the RBD of human EnvP(b)1, which defines structural similarities with extant leukemia viruses, despite little sequence conservation. This structure highlights a common scaffold from which novel receptor binding specificities likely evolved. The evolutionary plasticity of this domain may underlie the diversity of related Envs in circulating viruses.IMPORTANCE Organisms can access genetic and functional novelty by capturing viral elements within their genomes, where they can evolve to drive new cellular or organismal processes. We demonstrate that a retroviral envelope gene, EnvP(b)1, has been maintained and its fusion activity preserved for 40 to 71 million years. It is expressed as a protein in multiple healthy human tissues. We determined the structure of its inferred receptor binding domain and compared it with the same domain in modern viruses. We found a common conserved architecture that underlies the varied receptor binding activity of divergent Env genes. The modularity and versatility of this domain may underpin the evolutionary success of this clade of fusogens.
Highlights
EnvP(b)1 is an endogenous retroviral envelope gene found in human and other primate genomes
8% of the human genome is derived from such endogenous retroviruses (ERVs), and similar percentages are observed across the animal kingdom [1]
Primate genomes harbor a number of ERV Env open reading frames (ORFs) with unknown functions [3, 4]
Summary
EnvP(b) is an endogenous retroviral envelope gene found in human and other primate genomes. We demonstrate that a retroviral envelope gene, EnvP(b), has been maintained and its fusion activity preserved for 40 to 71 million years It is expressed as a protein in multiple healthy human tissues. Primate genomes harbor a number of ERV Env open reading frames (ORFs) with unknown functions [3, 4] Many of these ORFs have been maintained for the duration of primate evolution, time periods exceeding 40 million years. EnvP(b) RNA has been detected in human tissues; protein expression and processing have not been previously reported [5, 6] It is unclear what function(s) EnvP(b) may have that would explain the fact that it has maintained a functional ORF over tens of millions of years
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