Ribosomal profiling of human endogenous retroviruses in healthy tissues

BMC Genomics. 2024 Jan 2;25(1):5. doi: 10.1186/s12864-023-09909-x.

Abstract

Human endogenous retroviruses (HERVs) are the germline embedded proviral fragments of ancient retroviral infections that make up roughly 8% of the human genome. Our understanding of HERVs in physiology primarily surrounds their non-coding functions, while their protein coding capacity remains virtually uncharacterized. Therefore, we applied the bioinformatic pipeline "hervQuant" to high-resolution ribosomal profiling of healthy tissues to provide a comprehensive overview of translationally active HERVs. We find that HERVs account for 0.1-0.4% of all translation in distinct tissue-specific profiles. Collectively, our study further supports claims that HERVs are actively translated throughout healthy tissues to provide sequences of retroviral origin to the human proteome.

Keywords: Dark genome; Endoretrotranslatome (ERT); Human endogenous retrovirus (HERV); Protein translation; Ribosomal profiling (RiboSeq).

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Endogenous Retroviruses* / genetics
  • Humans
  • Ribosomes* / genetics