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      The mouse IAPE endogenous retrovirus can infect cells through any of the five GPI-anchored EphrinA proteins

      abstract
      1 , 2 , , 1 , 2 , 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 3 , 4 , 5 , 1
      Retrovirology
      BioMed Central
      Frontiers of Retrovirology 2011
      3-5 October 2011

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          Abstract

          Background The IAPE family of murine endogenous retroelements is present at more than 200 copies in the mouse genome [1]. We previously identified a single copy that proved to be fully functional, i.e. which could generate viral particles budding out of the cell, as seen by electron microscopy, and which was also infectious on a series of cells, including human cells [2]. We had also shown that IAPE are the progenitors of the highly reiterated IAP elements. The latter are now strictly intracellular retrotransposons, due to the loss of the envelope gene and re-localisation of the associated particles towards the endoplamic reticulum in the course of evolution. To investigate further the life cycle of IAPE elements, we searched for their cellular receptor by using a complementation assay. Methods Cells resistant to infection by IAPE elements were transduced with a lentiviral cDNA library constructed from cells susceptible to infection, and then subjected to successive selection cycles using IAPE Env lentiviral pseudotypes. Results Using this strategy, we identified ephrin A4 (EFNA4), a GPI-anchored molecule involved in several developmental processes, as a candidate receptor for the IAPE pseudotypes. We showed that its ectopic expression is sufficient to render previously refractive cells susceptible to infection by IAPE pseudotypes. In addition, using soluble recombinant proteins, we could demonstrate a direct interaction between the IAPE envelope and the ephrin A4 protein, definitively demonstrating that the latter is a receptor for the IAPE elements. We also found that the other 4 members of the EphrinA family -but not those of the closely related EphrinB family - are able to mediate IAPE cell entry. Using qRT-PCR and immunohistochemistry experiments, we could show that ephrinA proteins are widely expressed, including in murine germline cells. Conclusions We showed that the IAPE murine endogenous retrovirus can use any of the 5 members of the ephrin A family of proteins as a receptor for cell entry. This property significantly increases the amount of possible cell types susceptible to IAPE infection in vivo. Interestingly, we could demonstrate that at least some of the ephrin A proteins are expressed on murine germline cells. This is consistent with the IAPE undergoing genomic amplification within the mouse genome through successive re-infection of its germline. Altogether, the properties of the identified receptors can account for the high load of IAPE elements in the mouse genome, and for the long-term survival of a functional copy.

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          Most cited references2

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          An infectious progenitor for the murine IAP retrotransposon: emergence of an intracellular genetic parasite from an ancient retrovirus.

          Mammalian genomes contain a high load of mobile elements among which long terminal repeat (LTR)- retrotransposons may represent up to 10% of the genomic DNA. The murine intracisternal A-type particle (IAP) sequences, the prototype of these mammalian "genetic parasites," have an intracellular replicative life cycle and are responsible for a very large fraction of insertional mutagenesis in mice. Yet, phylogenetic analyses strongly suggest that they derive from an ancestral retrovirus that has reached the germline of a remote rodent ancestor and has been "endogenized." A genome-wide screening of the mouse genome now has led us to identify the likely progenitor of the intracellular IAP retrotransposons. This identified "living fossil"-that we found to be present only as a single fully active copy-discloses all the characteristics of a bona fide retrovirus, with evidence for particle formation at the cell membrane, and release of virions with a mature morphology that are infectious. We show, by generating appropriate chimeras, that IAPs derive from this element via passive loss of its env gene, and gain of an endoplasmic reticulum targeting signal, resulting in its "intracellularization" and in the gain of transpositional activity. The identification within the mouse genome of the still active retroviral progenitor of the IAP endogenous mobile elements and the experimental dissection of the molecular events responsible for the shift in its life cycle provide a conclusive illustration of the process that has led, during evolution, to the generation of very successful intracellular retrotransposons from ancient retroviruses.
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            cDNA sequence and genomic characterization of intracisternal A-particle-related retroviral elements containing an envelope gene.

            Intracisternal A-particle retrotransposons (IAPs) are retroviruslike elements that are defective in envelope protein synthesis and exist without an extracellular stage. We have isolated a novel class of cDNAs that are related to known IAP elements in the nucleotide and deduced protein sequence of gag and pol genes but also contain a previously unidentified reading frame between the pol gene and putative U3 region. Analysis of the deduced protein sequence reveals features of the putative protein that are characteristic of retroviral envelope proteins. The isolated cDNAs represent transcripts of multiple retroid elements in the mouse genome that were termed IAPE (intracisternal A-particle-related elements coding for envelope). IAPE env genes exist in approximately 200 copies per haploid genome as integral parts of the majority of these retroid elements. Four major IAPE subgroups could be distinguished after EcoRI digestion of genomic DNA.
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              Author and article information

              Conference
              Retrovirology
              Retrovirology
              BioMed Central
              1742-4690
              2011
              3 October 2011
              : 8
              : Suppl 2
              : P17
              Affiliations
              [1 ]CNRS UMR8122, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France
              [2 ]Université Paris-Sud, Orsay, France
              [3 ]Universitéde Lyon, UCB-Lyon1, IFR128, Lyon, France
              [4 ]INSERM, U758, Lyon, France
              [5 ]Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, Lyon, France
              Article
              1742-4690-8-S2-P17
              10.1186/1742-4690-8-S2-P17
              3236903
              a1cbf95e-8eaa-4c3b-8f22-369b61da5f13
              Copyright ©2011 Dewannieux et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

              This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

              Frontiers of Retrovirology 2011
              Amsterdam, The Netherlands
              3-5 October 2011
              History
              Categories
              Poster Presentation

              Microbiology & Virology
              Microbiology & Virology

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