Infectious Evolution: ancient virus hit apes, not our ancestors, in the genes

May 31, 2008 on 7:09 pm | Friedrich Braun | Evolution, Genetics & Human Bio-Diversity , Health , Origin of Man | | Email This Post | Print this Post

A vicious virus infected ancestral chimpanzees and gorillas in Africa between 4 million and 3 million years ago. Not only did it kill a great many of these primates, but it also infiltrated the surviving animals’ genomes, altering the course of evolution. That’s the picture emerging from a new analysis of modern-primate DNA.

Around 1.5 million years ago, this virus of the class called
retroviruses also infected ancestors of modern baboons and macaques,
two African monkeys, reports geneticist Evan E. Eichler of the
University of Washington in Seattle and his colleagues. However, no
molecular remnants of this ancient infection appear in the DNA of
people, whose ancestors also inhabited Africa, or in the genes of
apes, such as orangutans, from Asia.

Retroviral infection “was almost a cataclysmic event for ancestral
chimps and gorillas,’ Eichler says. “It’s a mystery to us why the
ancestors of people and orangutans were excluded from it”

While analyzing data from an ongoing project determining the
chimpanzee genome, Eichler’s team noticed sequences that dramatically
differed from corresponding regions of human DNA. The team identified
the sequences as the remains of a retrovirus.

Using chemical probes, the researchers then found more than 100
copies of the retrovirus throughout the chimp genome. These
retroviral sequences disturb the workings of at least six genes,
including ones found in the brain and testes.

Gorillas, baboons, and macaques also possessed about 100 retroviral
copies. The researchers used available estimates of how quickly the
retrovirus mutates to calculate when the infections occurred.

Several scenarios could explain the selective infection of ancient
chimps and gorillas. African apes might have evolved a susceptibility
to the infection, for example, or ancestors of people and Asian apes
might have developed a resistance.

The new results, which the researchers report in the April PloS
Biology fit with a surprising conclusion floated in a 2002 analysis
of chimp DNA. That study found a dearth of mutations in chimp genes
known to be crucial for repelling infections. Pascal Gagneux of the
University of California, San Diego and his colleagues then proposed
that this genomic feature was a reflection of an HIV-like retroviral
epidemic among ancestral chimps nearly 3 million years ago that left
only a few to pass on rare resistance genes. Today’s chimps are thus
the offspring of unusually virus-resistant animals.

“Retroviruses are not just diabolical [killers],” says
Gagneux. “Under the right conditions, such viruses contribute to the
evolution of their hosts”

Eichler’s group provides “compelling evidence” of separate,
comparably ancient retroviral infections in ancestral chimps and
gorillas, remarks Harvard University’s Maryellen Ruvolo. Chimps
probably came in contact with the virus when they hunted infected
monkeys, Ruvolo suggests. It’s not clear how the infection reached
gorillas.

The new evidence that closely related primates can contract different
retroviral infections is surprising, says Dixie Mager of the
University of British Columbia in Vancouver. “Most people in the
field would not have predicted this finding,” she adds.

Scientists have estimated that 8 percent of human DNA consists of
retroviral sequences that were deposited during infections of our
African-ape ancestors between 35 million and 25 million years ago.

COPYRIGHT 2005 Science Service, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2005 Gale Group

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