Human Embryos May Be Affected By Ancient Viral Invaders
Viruses that invaded the DNA of humanity's ancestors millions of
years ago may now play critical roles in the earliest stages of human
development, researchers say.
The discovery sheds light on the key part that viruses may have played in human evolution, scientists added.
The
early stages of embryonic development lay the foundation of what become
the organs and tissues of an organism. Past research had revealed that a
host of factors can influence early human development, such as the
diets and environments of parents. Now researchers find that viruses
incorporated into the human genome may be another major factor.
Viruses
infect cells in order to hijack their machinery and make copies of
themselves. One type of virus known as a retrovirus does this by weaving
its own genes into the DNA of its hosts. The most infamous retrovirus
is HIV, the virus that causes AIDS.
In rare instances,
retroviruses infect sperm or egg cells. If those cells go on to become
part of a person, his or her cells will contain retroviral DNA, which
they can then pass onto their descendants. Prior studies revealed that
at least 8 percent of the human genome is made up of these so-called
endogenous retroviruses — the remnants of retroviral infections our
ancestors had millions of years ago. These retroviral elements no longer
produce active viruses.
Scientists had long thought that
endogenous retroviruses might be junk DNA that did nothing within the
human genome. However, recent studies found that one class of endogenous
retroviruses known as human endogenous retrovirus subfamily H, or HERV-H,
is surprisingly active in human embryonic stem cells, and is key to
their ability to become any other kind of cell in the body. Past
research suggests that HERV-H sequences are unique to humans and great
apes, invading primates less than 20 million years ago.
Now researchers find that retroviral material could play key roles from the beginning of human development.
"Endogenous retroviruses might have played an important role in human evolution," said lead study author Jonathan Göke, a computational biologist at the Genome Institute of Singapore.
The
possibility that the early stages of human development might depend in
part on genetic material from an outside source, much less a virus, is
counter-intuitive, Göke said. Still, random mutations are a very slow
way to introduce lasting changes to genomes — retroviruses may have
proven a fast way at introducing genetic alterations, including ones
important enough to steer the course of human development, he said.
The
scientists investigated more than 650,000 retroviral elements within
the human genome, about 5,000 of which belong to HERV-H. They analyzed
previously published data about the activity of these retroviral
elements in unfertilized egg cells and human embryonic stem cells, as
well as during the earliest stages of development, including the
one-cell stage, known as the zygote; the two-cell, four-cell and
eight-cell stages; the morula, when the embryo becomes a solid ball of
cells; and the blastocyst, when the embryo becomes a hollow ball of
cells.
"They did a really good job going the distance to dig through the data," said molecular biologist Didier Trono at the Federal Polytechnic School of Lausanne in Switzerland, who did not take part in this research.
The
researchers discovered that roughly 1,400 of these retroviral elements
were only expressed at specific times during embryonic development. They
believe these are under control of the embryo's cellular machinery and
therefore "potentially important in development," Göke said.
It
remains uncertain what role these retroviral elements play in early
human development, but it may have to do with how millions of years of
evolution have made viruses masters at controlling the biology of their
victims. One possibility is that embryos are using these retroviral
elements as signals to switch on genetic activity within their cells.
Originally, the retroviruses used these signals to activate themselves,
but the cells may now have co-opted these signals to activate other
parts of their genome instead, Göke said.
One challenge to
determining what these retroviral elements do is that they do not exist
in common lab animals such as mice, and they are not active in the human
cell lines most widely used in research. Göke and his colleagues are
now attempting to identify other cells these retroviral elements show
activity in to study their function.
All in all, Trono noted that
up to a whopping 70 percent or so of the human genome may actually come
from retroviruses, much of it now too degraded to identify as such.
"These
virus-like elements are increasingly now seen not as junk DNA, but as
involved in regulating most aspects of human biology, from early
development to the physiology of every single system, from our brain to
our immune system," Trono said.
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