Published online: 21 June 2007; | doi:10.1038/news070618-15 / http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070618/full/070618-15.html
Ancient disease resistance made us vulnerable to HIV
Early immune resistance may have helped to set stage for modern pandemic.Michael Hopkin


| On the defense: our immune system has an extra barrier not found in chimps.
Narelle Towie/NT |
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Humans may be susceptible to infection by HIV because our ancient ancestors evolved resistance to another virus.
That's
the conclusion reached by geneticists who have compared our own genome
sequence with that of apes, in search of signs of old viral attacks.
The researchers wondered whether chimps had been battered by a virus
that humans had evolved a resistance to, and whether that resistance
might shed some light on our modern susceptibility to other viruses.
Their hunch was right.
The
group found that the DNA of our closest evolutionary relatives is
riddled with the hallmarks of a now-extinct virus called PtERV1. This
virus probably infected chimpanzees and other apes around four million
years ago - after chimps' evolutionary split from humans. Chimps were
badly hit by the virus. But humans, it seems, could fight it off.
Unfortunately, the defensive protein that protects against PtERV1 seems
to increase our cells' susceptibility to HIV attack, report Michael
Emerman and his colleagues at the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research
Center in Seattle.
PtERV1,
like HIV, is a 'retrovirus' - it contains RNA that is converted into
DNA within the host cell and then inserted into the host genome.
Throughout evolution, such viruses leave a legacy as their DNA is
passed on from generation to generation, ultimately becoming present in
the entire host population. Roughly 8% of human DNA is made up of these
viral leftovers.
Emerman
and his team scoured the chimpanzee genome and found around 130 copies
of DNA sequences from PtERV1. But as they report in this week's
Science1, not one copy of this viral DNA has been incorporated into the human genome, meaning that something must have fought it off.
Single defenceEmerman
and his colleagues used the chimpanzee DNA to reconstruct part of the
virus in the lab. They then tried to infect human cells in culture with
it, and found that a protein called TRIM5??prevented the virus from
entering human cells. When this protein was removed from human cells,
the cells were vulnerable to the reconstructed virus; but they were
also less susceptible to infection by HIV.
No
one is sure why this should be the case, but the researchers suspect
that the ancient human immune system might have 'put all its eggs in
one basket' as far as defending against retroviruses was concerned.
Humans don't seem to have any immune defensive measures against
retroviruses other than TRIM5.
This immune strategy must have carried an evolutionary
advantage millions of years ago, Emerman says, "The most obvious
benefit is that this protected some humans from disease." But he adds
that "we don't really know anything about what sort of disease PtERV1
might have caused."
Unfortunately,
the discovery does not hold much promise for efforts to find a vaccine
against HIV/AIDS, says Emerma. "I do not see much insight of this work
into vaccines, although maybe others can," he says. "I see this work
more along the lines of understanding human history by uncovering the
past - sort of like archaeology or palaeontology."
What
the work does do is spotlight how the human immune system came to be
the way it is today. "Our host defence genes have been shaped by a long
history of genetic conflict with ancient viruses. If we want to
understand why our defences are the way they are, the answers
inevitably lie in these ancient viruses, more so than in the ones that
have affected us only recently," says Emerman.
Reference : Kaiser S. M., Malik H. S.& Emerman M. Science, 316. 1756 - 1758 (2007).
SIDA : un virus fossile du singe cause de notre vulnérabilité ?
Ambassade de France aux USA
Les
humains seraient sensibles à l'infection par le VIH suite à
l'acquisition d'une résistance développée par nos ancêtres. Cette
conclusion est avancée lors d'une étude publiée dans Science par le laboratoire de Michael Emerman, du Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center de Seattle.
http://www.futura-sciences.com/fr/sinformer/actualites/news/t/genetique-1/d/sida-un-virus-fossile-du-singe-cause-de-notre-vulnerabilite_12265/