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    Retrovirology. 2006 Oct 3;3:67.

    The discovery of endogenous retroviruses.

    Weiss RA.

    Division of Infection & Immunity, University College London, 46 Cleveland Street, London W1T 4JF, UK. r.weiss@ucl.ac.uk

    When endogenous retroviruses (ERV) were discovered in the late 1960s, the Mendelian inheritance of retroviral genomes by their hosts was an entirely new concept. Indeed Howard M Temin's DNA provirus hypothesis enunciated in 1964 was not generally accepted, and reverse transcriptase was yet to be discovered. Nonetheless, the evidence that we accrued in the pre-molecular era has stood the test of time, and our hypothesis on ERV, which one reviewer described as 'impossible', proved to be correct. Here I recount some of the key observations in birds and mammals that led to the discovery of ERV, and comment on their evolution, cross-species dispersion, and what remains to be elucidated.

    PMID: 17018135 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

    PMCID: 1617120

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