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Copyright Gilbert et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Parallel Germline Infiltration of a Lentivirus in Two Malagasy Lemurs 1Department of Biology, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas, United States of America 2Department of Zoology, Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America 3Vahatra, BP 3972, Antananarivo, Madagascar Harmit S. Malik, Editor Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, United States of America * E-mail: cedric/at/uta.edu Conceived and designed the experiments: CG CF. Performed the experiments: CG DGM CF. Analyzed the data: CG DGM CF. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: SMG. Wrote the paper: CG CF. Received January 16, 2009; Accepted February 17, 2009. Abstract Retroviruses normally infect the somatic cells of their host and are transmitted horizontally, i.e., in an exogenous way. Occasionally, however, some retroviruses can also infect and integrate into the genome of germ cells, which may allow for their vertical inheritance and fixation in a given species; a process known as endogenization. Lentiviruses, a group of mammalian retroviruses that includes HIV, are known to infect primates, ruminants, horses, and cats. Unlike many other retroviruses, these viruses have not been demonstrably successful at germline infiltration. Here, we report on the discovery of endogenous lentiviral insertions in seven species of Malagasy lemurs from two different genera—Cheirogaleus and Microcebus. Combining molecular clock analyses and cross-species screening of orthologous insertions, we show that the presence of this endogenous lentivirus in six species of Microcebus is the result of one endogenization event that occurred about 4.2 million years ago. In addition, we demonstrate that this lentivirus independently infiltrated the germline of Cheirogaleus and that the two endogenization events occurred quasi-simultaneously. Using multiple proviral copies, we derive and characterize an apparently full length and intact consensus for this lentivirus. These results provide evidence that lentiviruses have repeatedly infiltrated the germline of prosimian species and that primates have been exposed to lentiviruses for a much longer time than what can be inferred based on sequence comparison of circulating lentiviruses. The study sets the stage for an unprecedented opportunity to reconstruct an ancestral primate lentivirus and thereby advance our knowledge of host–virus interactions. Author Summary Retroviruses are RNA viruses that are reverse transcribed into DNA and inserted into the host's genome. Though this process happens most frequently in somatic cells (e.g., immune cells for HIV), retroviruses can occasionally be integrated in the genome of the host's germ cells. Such viral insertions may thus be transmitted vertically from parent to offspring, leading to the formation of “endogenous retroviruses.” A substantial fraction of mammalian genomes (about 8% in humans) corresponds to remnants of endogenous retroviruses integrated throughout evolution, providing a fossil record of past viral invasions and important clues on the history of modern retroviruses. In this study, we demonstrate that an endogenous retrovirus related to HIV and other lentiviruses was endogenized independently and quasi-simultaneously in two lineages of Malagasy lemurs around 4.2 million years ago. These are the first endogenous lentiviruses discovered in primates. Based on sequences collected from different lemur species, we reconstructed an apparently intact and complete sequence for this ancestral prosimian lentivirus, which will allow functional analysis and advance our understanding of the biology and origin of lentiviruses, including HIV. Furthermore, our study indicates that lentiviruses may still be circulating in lemurs and that a systematic screening of Malagasy mammals could further our knowledge on the past and present diversity of lentiviruses. Introduction Lentiviruses are mammalian retroviruses known to infect cattle, cats, horses, sheep, and primates. They are the focus of intense study due to their causative association with AIDS in human. Although our knowledge on the origin and early evolution of HIV has grown exponentially over the past few years [1],[2], much remains unresolved about the deeper relationships between primate and non-primate lentiviruses, the origin of lentiviruses, and their mode of structural evolution over long periods of evolutionary time. This is because these viruses evolve extremely rapidly [3], in a conflicting relationship with their hosts [4], and while their high mutation rate provides a wealth of information documenting their recent history, it also quickly erases evidence of their deeper ancestry. The lifecycle of retroviruses is atypical compared to other viruses in that after appropriate receptor recognition and entry in a specific cell type, their RNA genome is reverse transcribed into double-stranded DNA and integrated into the host genome as a provirus [5]. Occasionally this process can take place in the host germline, and the integrated copy, also called endogenous retrovirus (ERV), may be transmitted vertically from parent to offspring and reach fixation in the host population. As such, ERVs constitute a “fossil record” of past viral infections that potentially provide an alternative way of gaining insights into the deep evolutionary history of present day exogenous retroviruses [6]. Although many ERVs have been characterized in mammals (e.g., 8% of the human genome), apparently very few derive from lentiviruses. Two reasons have traditionally been put forward to explain their absence in mammalian genomes: (i) they are of relatively recent evolutionary origin and endogenization has not yet commonly occurred, and/or (ii) they were not able to enter germ cells because of a very specific cell tropism [7],[8]. Recently however, an endogenous lentivirus, called RELIK, has been identified in the genome of rabbits and hares (Lagomorpha), whose germline integration was dated at least 12 millions years (my) old [9]–[11]. This discovery not only showed that lentiviruses were able to infiltrate mammalian germlines, but also demonstrated that this group of viruses is probably much older than what could previously be inferred based on sequence comparison of extant exogenous lentiviruses. Even more recently, Gifford et al. [12] described the remnants of an endogenous lentivirus in the genome of the prosimian primate Microcebus murinus. This virus, called pSIVgml for “gray mouse lemur prosimian immunodeficiency virus”, represents the first example of a primate endogenous lentivirus. Here we report on our independent discovery and characterization of pSIVgml and of a second, closely related endogenous prosimian lentivirus, pSIVfdl, which independently colonized the genome of the fat-tailed dwarf lemur Cheirogaleus medius. Our analyses of these defective proviral sequences corroborate and expand the findings of Gifford et al. [12] and allow us to reconstruct an apparently full-length and intact pSIV consensus sequence that provides new insights into the evolutionary history of lentiviruses and should permit functional analysis of an ancestral primate lentivirus. Results/Discussion Discovery of an Endogenous Lentivirus in the Gray Mouse Lemur Genome Homology based searches (tBLASTn) of whole genome shotgun (WGS) sequences using the rabbit endogenous lentivirus (RELIK) consensus sequence [9] as a query yielded highly significant hits in the gag and pol domains to two contigs from the gray mouse lemur (Microcebus murinus) genome sequencing project (Table 1). Further BLASTn searches on the M. murinus WGS sequences (1.93× June 2007 release) using the M. murinus pol-containing contig (ABDC01505939) as a query yielded ten other contigs containing a fragment highly similar to the region situated upstream of the pol domain, i.e., the presumed long terminal repeat (LTR). Five of these fragments (413–423 bp in length) are flanked by short direct repeats akin to target site duplications (TSD, Table 1) and therefore likely correspond to solo LTRs resulting from intra-element recombination [13]. Four other hits correspond to LTRs truncated due to sequencing or assembly gap, and one corresponds to a 3′ full-length LTR flanking an env domain also truncated due to a gap.
These results are broadly consistent with Gifford et al. [12] who undertook an approach similar to ours, except that these authors also searched the trace archives database and found an additional solo-LTR that we did not detect in the WGS database (Table 1). Below we confirm that these proviral fragments correspond to an endogenous lentivirus identical to the one described in [12] and thus we adopt the nomenclature introduced by these authors who named this lentivirus pSIVgml for gray mouse lemur prosimian immunodeficiency virus. Copy Number and Taxonomic Distribution The coverage of the gray mouse lemur genome is low (1.93×) and its assembly still very fragmentary, implying that any estimate of pSIVgml copy number based only on database mining will be tentative at best. Two of the pSIVgml LTRs in the M. murinus WGS were associated to internal coding sequences (contig ABDC01454290/ ABDC01505939 and contig ABDC01306160) suggesting that they represent the 5′ and 3′ LTRs of seemingly full-length proviruses. Since these LTRs were not flanked by the same TSD (CCCCA vs. ATTAT) (Table 1, Figure 1
As a more direct approach to estimate the copy number of pSIVgml and to screen for the possible presence of related endogenous lentiviruses in related prosimian species, we performed Southern hybridizations of digested total genomic DNA from M. murinus, nine other species of Malagasy lemurs and Homo sapiens as a negative control. A ~1-kb probe corresponding to a fragment of the pSIVgml env gene revealed only one band in M. murinus (Figure 2A
The Southern analysis showed that pSIV is not restricted to the gray mouse lemur but is also present in low copy number in several additional Malagasy lemurs. The env probe revealed one band in M. griseorufus, four bands in Cheirogaleus medius and no bands in the other lemur species examined (M. ravelobensis, M. myoxinus, M. tavaratra, M. sambiranensis, Mirza coquereli, Propithecus tattersalli, Eulemur fulvus rufus) (Figure 2A Reconstruction of a pSIV Consensus Using PCR primers (Table S1) designed upon the pSIVgml-containing contigs, we sequenced the missing fragments of pSIVgml in Microcebus murinus and multiple clones covering what appears to represent a full-length pSIV in Cheirogaleus medius (Figure 1 Though overall the structure of our pSIV consensus is largely consistent with the pSIVgml sequence reported by Gifford et al. [12], the inclusion of additional pSIVfdl proviral copies (from Cheirogaleus) allowed us to fill several gaps that are apparent in pSIVgml. The revised pSIV consensus is now free of stop codons and non-sense frameshifts since none of the mutations was shared between pSIVgml and the various pSIVfdl copies. In addition, the fragment including the 3′ end of the capsid, nucleocapsid and the 5′ end of the protease domains that is missing in the pSIVgml sequence (Figure 1 We confirm the presence of a putative rev accessory gene overlapping with the 3′ end of the env open reading frame (ORF), but the two different copies of pSIVfdl included in our analysis do not contain the stop codon separating the rev gene from the putative terminal small ORF identified in [12]. Consequently, the putative rev gene characterized here encompasses the sequence corresponding to this 3′ putative ORF and terminates with a motif rich in leucine residues, characteristic of the nuclear export signals found in rev and other nuclear transporters [15],[16]. The most significant difference between the pSIV consensus and the previously reported pSIVgml sequence [12] lies in the region situated between pol and env. The three different pSIVfdl clones covering this region (clones f1, f2 and e1) all contain a 511-bp region that is apparently deleted in pSIVgml (Figure 1 Interestingly, tBLASTn searches using the pSIV consensus as query yielded weak but significant similarity (e-value = 0.041) with the C-terminus of the reverse transcriptase encoded by primate lentiviruses in a region of pSIV including 46 aa of the orf2 C-terminus and 25 aa of the env N-terminus (Figure 3
Phylogenetic Analyses In order to formally assess the phylogenetic relationships between pSIV and other retroviruses, we performed Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood (ML) phylogenetic analyses of the well-conserved reverse transcriptase (RT) domain. Both methods unequivocally support the grouping of pSIV within the lentivirus clade (Figure S5). Furthermore, as the RT alone does not provide any phylogenetic resolution between the different genera of lentiviruses, we also conducted Bayesian and ML analyses of the pol and gag domains extracted from a diverse set of lentiviruses. Separate analysis of the two domains did not reveal any obvious recombination event, i.e., the gag tree was not incongruent with the pol tree (not shown). In agreement with Gifford et al. [12], the Bayesian analysis combining gag and pol provided strong support for a potential sister relationship between pSIV and other primate lentiviruses, but this grouping is somewhat equivocal since the support was much lower in the ML analysis (Figure 4
How Many pSIV Germline Infiltrations? The Malgasy lemurs form a monophyletic group composed of four families (Cheirogaleidae (~21 spp), Indriidae (11 spp), Lemuridae (19 spp) and Lepilemuridae (8 spp)) [21] that is thought to have colonized Madagascar only once, between 60 and 50 my ago, most likely by rafting across the Mozambique Channel from East Africa [22]. As within the Cheirogaleidae family Microcebus is more closely related to Mirza than to Cheirogaleus [23] (Figure 2
Under the single germline infiltration hypothesis, the total genetic distance between the different pSIVfdl and pSIVgml copies should correspond to the mutations accumulated on both Microcebus and Cheirogaleus lineages under the neutral substitution rates of these species. These genetic distances vary between 0.038 in gag and 0.076 substitutions per site in env (average = 0.05) (Figure 1 = 8.4 my), i.e., significantly younger than the split of Cheirogaleus and Microcebus (19–35 my). Therefore, the level of divergence between pSIVfdl and pSIVgml does not seem consistent with a single germline infiltration that would have occurred in the common ancestor of these lemurs and rather indicates that pSIV independently infiltrated the germline of Microcebus and Cheirogaleus after these two genera diverged from each other.Also consistent with the hypothesis of two independent germline infiltrations, the Southern blot (Figure 2
Given the low number of pSIV proviruses, the lack of coding sequence for most of them (solo LTRs) and the high level of similarity between the pSIVfdl copies, we did not attempt to identify the mechanism(s) that produced multiple copies in the different lemur genomes. They could result from repeated germline insertions of the same or very similar circulating lentiviruses, intragenomic retrotransposition events, reinfection by an endogenized copy, or a mix of these mechanisms. For simplicity, we therefore refer to all insertions in each species using the term “germline infiltration” but we acknowledge that each insertion may or may not correspond to a different endogenization event, i.e, the integration of one exogenous virus in the germline followed by its vertical transmission to offspring and fixation in the species. How Old Are the Two pSIVs Germline Infiltrations? In order to estimate the time of the pSIVgml insertions in the Microcebus genome, we sequenced four orthologous solo LTRs shared by different Microcebus spp. (see Figure 5 = 0.025) (Table S3), which corresponds to an approximate insertion time of between 2.5 and 6.2 my (average = 4.2 my), again seemingly incompatible with a single germline infiltration event predating the Cheirogaleus/Microcebus split ~19–38 my ago. Interestingly, M. murinus shares at least one orthologous insertion with each of the five other Microcebus species (Figure 5Our dating of pSIV germline integrations (2.5 and 6.2 my; average = 4.2 my) is older than the one inferred by Gifford et al. [12] (1.9–3.8 my). These authors relied solely on a comparison of two LTRs that they interpreted as an allelic polymorphism for a full-length pSIVgml and its solo LTR remaining after recombinogenic deletion of the rest of the provirus. However, a closer inspection of the raw sequence reads used for WGS assembly reveals that this apparent polymorphism is an artifact resulting from an assembly error, a common occurrence in low-coverage draft genome sequences. We experimentally confirmed that these LTRs actually originate from two different loci erroneously associated due to the genome misassembly (as described above and in Figure S1). Our dating method, which combines sequence divergence comparisons and cross-species analysis of orthologous insertions, provides a more reliable estimate of the age of pSIVgml germline infiltration.Because pSIV apparently colonized at least twice independently the germline of lemurs, the total genetic distance between pSIVfdl and pSIVgml copies is expected to be the sum of (i) the mutations accumulated under the host neutral substitution rate on both Microcebus and Cheirogaleus branches since the time of each germline infiltration and (ii) the mutations accumulated under the viral substitution rate during the time separating the two germline infiltrations. As shown above, the average divergence between pSIVfdl and pSIVgml is 0.05 substitutions per site. We have also calculated the number of substitutions that occurred on pSIVgml since it integrated in the Microcebus germline, which is half of the orthologous LTR divergence, i.e., 0.025/2 = 0.0125 substitution per site. The cumulative number of substitutions that occurred on pSIV under the viral mutation rate and under the Cheirogaleus neutral substitution rate since germline infiltration is therefore approximately 0.05−0.0125 = 0.0375 substitutions per site. Lentiviral substitution rates differ from mammalian neutral substitution rates by 6 orders of magnitudes. The HIV substitution rate has been estimated to vary between 10×10−3 (synonymous substitutions) and 2×10−3 substitutions per site per year (non synonymous substitutions in gag-pol) [27]. Remarkably, under these rates, 0.0375 substitutions per site (as observed in pSIVfdl) are generated in only 3.75–18.75 years. Given the large difference between viral and mammalian neutral substitution rates, it is unlikely that any of the approximations made above would change this value by more than one or two orders of magnitude. This indicates that the time window separating the two germline infiltrations of pSIV was extremely narrow and thus these events must have occurred quasi simultaneously on an evolutionary time scale.Conclusions In this study, we have confirmed the presence of an endogenous lentivirus in the genome of the Malagasy prosimian Microcebus murinus and its relatively close phylogenetic relationship with modern simian lentiviruses, as reported recently [12]. Given that Madagascar has been isolated from Africa for 160 million years [28], the presence of a lentivirus on this island raises several intriguing questions concerning the time, mode, and direction of the transfer of pSIV between Africa and Madagascar (see Gifford et al. [12] for a comprehensive discussion on this issue). In addition, we have demonstrated that pSIV is also present in low copy numbers in the genome of several other species of Microcebus and in another Malagasy prosimian, Cheirogaleus medius. While the various pSIVgml insertions in Microcebus species are most likely the result of a single germline infiltration that occurred around 4.2 my ago before the split of the Microcebus genus, those detected in Cheirogaleus most likely stem from a second, independent germline infiltration, that occurred concomitantly to the one in Microcebus. These two synchronous lentiviral colonizations of the germline of two non-sister lemur genera are striking given the paucity of hitherto characterized endogenous lentiviruses. It is possible that they have been facilitated either by a broader cell tropism of pSIV (or at least of the particular variants of pSIV that led to endogenization) compared to most other lentiviruses, or that the germ cells of lemurs are particularly prone to lentiviral endogenization. In addition, the present geographic distributions of Cheirogaleus and Microcebus species widely overlap on Madagascar [29],[30]. Sympatry of the two genera, if already occurring at the time of pSIV endogenizations, may have also facilitated the horizontal transfer of pSIV between these lemurs. Although one study provides evidence of SIV antigens in the Malagasy ring tailed lemurs (diverged from the ancestor of Microcebus and Cheirogaleus between 45.8−33.4 my ago) based on western blot analysis [31], there is no direct evidence of circulating lentiviruses in prosimian primates. A systematic screening of the native Malagasy mammalian fauna for the presence of endogenous and/or exogenous lentiviruses might help us further our understanding of the origin and spread of pSIV and lentiviruses in general. Finally, the inclusion of multiple copies of pSIVs allowed us to fill the different gaps that are apparent in the pSIVgml sequence, and to infer an apparently intact pSIV consensus suitable for experimental reconstruction and functional analysis. In this respect, it is noteworthy that our pSIV consensus contains a complete capsid domain and pol-env intervening region, with the later potentially encoding an accessory gene situated in the typical location and of the same size as vif. The capsid domain and vif accessory gene of HIV are known to interact respectively with TRIM5alpha [32] and APOBEC3 [33], two mammalian protein families involved in the restriction of lentiviruses and other retroviruses in their host. The identification of these two components in pSIV may allow testing of their interactions with TRIM5alpha and APOBEC3 proteins, which could further our understanding of the impact of these defense systems in shaping the evolution of lentiviruses. Materials and Methods PCR/Cloning/Sequencing The PCR primers designed to amplify pSIV fragments in Microcebus and Cheirogaleus are listed in Table S1. Those used for the screening of presence/absence of orthologous solo-LTRs in the various species of lemurs and for testing the validity of contigs containing pSIV fragments are given in the caption of Figure S1 and and5.5 Southern Blot Genomic Southern blots were prepared by digesting completely ~5 µg of total genomic DNA from Microcebus murinus, M. griseorufus, M. ravelobensis, Mirza coquereli, Cheirogaleus medius, Propithecus tattersalli, Eulemur fulvus and Homo sapiens (Hela cells) with XbaI (Promega). The digests were run overnight in a 0.8% agarose gel and blotted onto a Hybond-N+ membrane (Amersham) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Blots were hybridized in PerfectHyb Plus hybridization buffer (Sigma) at 65°C either with a ~1-kb fragment of the pSIVgml env domain or with a ~300 bp fragment of the pSIVgml LTR. Membranes were washed in 2×/0.1% SDS or 0.1× SSC/0.1% SDS at 65°C (i.e., medium to high stringency).The two probes were generated by PCR using the Env-F/6061-R1 and LTR-F/LTR-R primers respectively (Table S1), and subsequently [α-32P]dCTP-labelled (Random Primed DNA Labeling Kit, Roche). See Table S4 for the voucher numbers of the tissue samples used in this study. A picture of the ethidium bromide stained gels used to prepare the blots is shown in Figure S2. Phylogenetic Analyses Three sets of phylogenetic analyses were conducted. The first one aimed at assessing formally the phylogenetic relationships between pSIV and other retroviruses and was based on an alignment including the 150 most conserved amino acids of the reverse transcriptase domain extracted from of a set of various retroviruses. The second one aimed at evaluating the support for a putative sister relationship between pSIV and other described primate lentiviruses and was based on an alignment including the 2350 most conserved nucleotides of gag-pol of all lentiviruses for which whole genome sequence is available. We also conducted phylogenetic analyses of a number of LTRs sequenced in the various species of lemurs in order to test whether pSIV was endogenized once in the common ancestor of Cheirogaleus+Microcebus or twice independently on the Cheirogaleus and Microcebus lineages. Sequences were aligned by hand using BioEdit [34] and the alignments (available in Datasets S1, S2 and S3) were submitted to Bayesian and Maximum Likelihood analyses using MrBayes [35] and PHYML [36]. For both types of analyses, we used the GTR+I+G model for the nucleotide dataset, as suggested by the AIC criterion in MrModeltest [37] and the rtREV model [38] for the amino acid dataset. Bayesian analyses were run for 5 million generations with a sampling frequency of one tree/set of parameters every 100 generations. 12,500 trees were discarded as burn-in before summarizing the tree samples. Maximum Likelihood support was evaluated via nonparametric bootstrap analyses using 1000 pseudo replicates of the original matrix. Accession numbers of the sequences used together with the pSIV consensus to construct the alignments are listed in Table S2. Dating Genetic distances between paralogous and orthologous pSIV copies were calculated in MEGA 4.1 [39] using the Jukes-Cantor correction. The bushbaby (Otolemur garnetti) is the closest species to Malagasy lemurs for which an estimate of neutral substitution rate is available. In this species, neutral rates were estimated to vary between 2.83×10−9 and 3.29×10−9 substitutions per site per year based on the analysis of several families of ancestral repeats [24]. We used the average of these values, i.e., 3×10−9 (SD = 0.2×10−9; n = 4).Figure S1 PCR verification of the Microcebus murinus contigs containing fragments of putative full-length pSIVgml copies. (A) The LTR fragments contained in the ABDC01505939 and ABDC01454290 contigs are 100% identical (1) suggesting that they correspond to the same LTR flanking a full length pSIV insertion in 5′ (see also Figure 1 (0.37 MB TIF) Click here for additional data file.(356K, tif) Figure S2 Picture of the ethidium bromide stained gels corresponding to the blots in figure 2A (A) (3.83 MB TIF) Click here for additional data file.(3.6M, tif) Figure S3 PCR validation of the absence of pSIV in Mirza coquereli. The first nine lanes show PCR results for three different sets of primers anchored at different positions within the internal sequence of pSIV (Table S1). For all three primer sets, bands of expected size were obtained in Cheirogaleus medius and Microcebus griseorufus but none in Mirza coquereli. As a positive control for M. coquereli, we used the primers 6061F/6061R to amplify the empty site for one of the pSIV solo LTR (as shown in Figure 5 (1.69 MB TIF) Click here for additional data file.(1.6M, tif) Figure S4 Detailed map of a consensus pSIV reconstructed using one copy of pSIVgml (gray mouse lemur) and several copies of pSIVfdl (fat-tail dwarf lemur). We follow [9],[12] for the annotation format. The alignment of the multiple clones and contigs is provided in Dataset S1. The consensus for the LTR region was build using all LTR sequences obtained in the various lemur species. The three large ORFs (gag, pol, env) and the boundaries of their different domains were identified by comparison with the HIV1-HXB2 sequence [40]. The two small ORFs (orf1 and orf2) do not show significant homology to any known lentiviral accessory gene but we note that they are located at a comparable genomic position than vif and tat, i.e., between pol and env, and the predicted proteins are very similar in size to those encoded by these accessory genes in other primate lentiviruses (vif is 192 aa and tat is 86 aa in HIV1-HXB2). The C-terminal ORF contains an arginine-rich motif similar to the nuclear localization signal (NLS) found in rev [16]. In addition, it is terminated by a leucine rich region that could potentially contain a nuclear export signal (NES), also characteristic of rev and other nuclear transporters [15],[16]. The inverted repeats at the ends of both LTRs and the putative promoter (TATATAA) are underlined and bold. The slippery sequence (AAAAAAC) and the hairpin/loop motifs characteristic of the retroviral gag/pol frameshift are indicated in the region where the gag and pol frames overlap. The gag/pol frameshift was identified using the program KnotInFrame [42]. (0.09 MB PDF) Click here for additional data file.(87K, pdf) Figure S5 Phylogenetic tree of a selection of different families of retroviruses obtained after analysis of the ~150 most conserved amino acid of the reverse transcriptase domain. Numbers at each node correspond to Bayesian posterior probabilities ≥0.95 / bootstrap ML values ≥80. Accession numbers of the sequences used in this analysis are listed in Table S2. The alignment used for the analyses is provided in Dataset S4. (0.32 MB TIF) Click here for additional data file.(308K, tif) Table S1 List of the primers used to amplify the pSIV fragments in the various Malagasy lemur species. The name of the clones is as in Figure 1 (0.03 MB DOC) Click here for additional data file.(25K, doc) Table S2 Accession numbers of the retroviral sequences used in the various phylogenetic analyses conducted in this study. *the RELIK sequence was copied from Katzourakis et al. (2007). **the pSIV sequence corresponds to the consensus reconstructed in this study (Figure S4). (0.02 MB DOC) Click here for additional data file.(23K, doc) Table S3 Corrected genetic distances between the four orthologous solo LTRs shared by the Microcebus species sequenced in this study. Values are given in number of substitution per site for each pairwise comparison in the following order: solo LTR from contig ABDC01306160/solo LTR from contig ABDC01159233/solo LTR from contig ABDC01361523/solo LTR from contig ABDC01457045. Dashes indicate that the comparison was not possible because the solo-LTR was absent in one or more species. (0.01 MB DOC) Click here for additional data file.(11K, doc) Table S4 Specimen voucher numbers of the taxa used in this study. All Microcebus species were provided by the Field Museum of Natural History (FMNH), Chicago, IL. The four other genera were provided by the Duke Lemur Center, Durham, NC. (0.03 MB DOC) Click here for additional data file.(31K, doc) Dataset S1 Alignment (in fasta format) of the various pSIV clones and contigs used to reconstruct the pSIV consensus. All clones were deposited in Genbank (see Materials and Methods for accession numbers). CME = Cheirogaleus medius. MMU = Microcebus murinus.(0.12 MB TXT) Click here for additional data file.(115K, txt) Dataset S2 Alignment (in fasta format) of ~2350 most conserved nucleotides of the gag-pol region of all lentiviruses for which a complete genome is available. Ambiguous regions were removed. Accession numbers of the sequences are listed in Table S2. (0.08 MB TXT) Click here for additional data file.(74K, txt) Dataset S3 Alignment (in fasta format) of the LTR fragments sequenced in the various species of lemurs. Ambiguous regions were removed. Sequences were deposited in Genbank (see Materials and Methods for accession numbers). CME = Cheirogaleus medius. MMU = Microcebus murinus. MTA = Microcebus tavaratra. MMY = Microcebus myoxinus. MRA = Microcebus ravelobensis. MSA = Microcebus sambiranensis. MGR = Microcebus griseorufus.(0.01 MB TXT) Click here for additional data file.(8.7K, txt) Dataset S4 Alignment (in fasta format) of the ~150 most conserved amino acids of the reverse transcriptase domain of a selection of various retroviruses. Ambiguous regions were removed. Accession numbers of the sequences are listed in Table S2. (0.01 MB TXT) Click here for additional data file.(4.4K, txt) Acknowledgments We thank J. Fondon and members of the Feschotte lab for critical comments and useful suggestions during the preparation of this manuscript. We are also grateful to the editor and reviewers for their constructive comments. We acknowledge Anne Yoder and Sarah Zehr from the Duke Lemur Center for providing tissues for several lemur species (this is DLC publication number #1144) and the Genome Sequencing Platform and The Genome Assembly Team at The Broad Institute for producing the M. murinus sequence data used in this study. Footnotes The authors have declared that no competing interests exist. This work was supported by grant R01GM77582 to CF from the National Institutes of Health. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. References 1. Hahn BH, Shaw GM, De Cock KM, Sharp PM. AIDS as a zoonosis: scientific and public health implications. Science. 2000;287:607–14. [PubMed] 2. 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Science. 2000 Jan 28; 287(5453):607-14.
[Science. 2000]Nature. 2008 Oct 2; 455(7213):661-4.
[Nature. 2008]J Virol. 2003 Apr; 77(7):3893-7.
[J Virol. 2003]Bioessays. 2006 Dec; 28(12):1153-6.
[Bioessays. 2006]Virus Genes. 2003 May; 26(3):291-315.
[Virus Genes. 2003]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1996 May 28; 93(11):5177-84.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1996]Genome Biol. 2006; 7(11):241.
[Genome Biol. 2006]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Apr 10; 104(15):6261-5.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Apr 10; 104(15):6261-5.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004 Feb 10; 101(6):1668-72.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Genome Res. 2008 Mar; 18(3):489-99.
[Genome Res. 2008]Syst Biol. 2003 Oct; 52(5):705-16.
[Syst Biol. 2003]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]N Engl J Med. 2008 Apr 10; 358(15):1590-602.
[N Engl J Med. 2008]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Chem Biol. 1997 May; 4(5):335-44.
[Chem Biol. 1997]Annu Rev Microbiol. 1998; 52():491-532.
[Annu Rev Microbiol. 1998]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Nature. 1990 Sep 27; 347(6291):341-2.
[Nature. 1990]Nature. 1996 Oct 17; 383(6601):586-7.
[Nature. 1996]Virology. 1998 Jan 20; 240(2):232-7.
[Virology. 1998]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Syst Biol. 2005 Oct; 54(5):719-30.
[Syst Biol. 2005]Genome Res. 2008 Mar; 18(3):489-99.
[Genome Res. 2008]Genome Res. 2008 Mar; 18(3):489-99.
[Genome Res. 2008]Syst Biol. 2003 Oct; 52(5):705-16.
[Syst Biol. 2003]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Nov 4; 105(44):17023-8.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Genetics. 2005 Nov; 171(3):1183-94.
[Genetics. 2005]Genome Res. 2008 Mar; 18(3):489-99.
[Genome Res. 2008]Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2007 May; 43(2):353-67.
[Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2007]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Mol Biol Evol. 1988 Jul; 5(4):313-30.
[Mol Biol Evol. 1988]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Science. 1995 Feb 10; 267(5199):852-855.
[Science. 1995]J Wildl Dis. 2007 Jan; 43(1):40-7.
[J Wildl Dis. 2007]Retrovirology. 2007 Jun 12; 4():40.
[Retrovirology. 2007]Retrovirology. 2008 Jun 24; 5():51.
[Retrovirology. 2008]Bioinformatics. 2001 Aug; 17(8):754-5.
[Bioinformatics. 2001]Syst Biol. 2003 Oct; 52(5):696-704.
[Syst Biol. 2003]J Mol Evol. 2002 Jul; 55(1):65-73.
[J Mol Evol. 2002]Mol Biol Evol. 2007 Aug; 24(8):1596-9.
[Mol Biol Evol. 2007]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Nov 4; 105(44):17023-8.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Apr 10; 104(15):6261-5.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007]Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008 Dec 23; 105(51):20362-7.
[Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2008]Annu Rev Microbiol. 1998; 52():491-532.
[Annu Rev Microbiol. 1998]Chem Biol. 1997 May; 4(5):335-44.
[Chem Biol. 1997]Nucleic Acids Res. 2008 Oct; 36(18):6013-20.
[Nucleic Acids Res. 2008]