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Differential evolution of antiretroviral restriction factors in pteropid bats as revealed by APOBEC3 gene complexity

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 09:41 authored by Joshua Hayward, Mary Tachedjian, Jie Cui, Adam Cheng, Adam Johnson, Michelle Baker, Reuben Harris, Lin-Fa Wang, Gilda Tachedjian
Bats have attracted attention in recent years as important reservoirs of viruses deadly to humans and other mammals. These infections are typically nonpathogenic in bats raising questions about innate immune differences that might exist between bats and othermammals. The APOBEC3 gene family encodes antiviral DNA cytosine deaminases with important roles in the suppression of diverse viruses and genomic parasites. Here, we characterize pteropid APOBEC3 genes and show that species within the genus Pteropus possess the largest and most diverse array of APOBEC3 genes identified in any mammal reported to date. Several bat APOBEC3 proteins are antiviral as demonstrated by restriction of retroviral infectivity using HIV-1 as a model, and recombinant A3Z1 subtypes possess strong DNA deaminase activity. These genes represent the first group of antiviral restriction factors identified in bats with extensive diversification relative to homologues in other mammals.

History

Journal

Molecular Biology and Evolution

Volume

35

Issue

7

Start page

1626

End page

1637

Total pages

12

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© The Author(s) 2018.

Former Identifier

2006088125

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-02-21

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