Adaptive evolution of KoRV-A retroviral silencing in wild koalas [RNA-seq]
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ABSTRACT: Koala Retrovirus-A is spreading through wild koalas in a north to south wave while transducing the germline, generating heritable genetic modifications as it transitions to an endogenous retrovirus. In animals south of Brisbane, we previously found that KoRV-A is expressed in the germline, but the resulting unspliced genomic transcripts are processed into sense strand piRNAs, post-transcriptionally suppressing replication. Here we show that this initial “innate” response is prevalent in animals south of the Brisbane River, but KoRV-A promoters are methylated and the virus is transcriptionally silenced in a subpopulation of animals north of the river. Transcriptional silencing correlates with capture of an anti-sense KoRV-A provirus by the 3’UTR of the MAP4K4 gene. The resulting hybrid transcripts are processed into anti-sense piRNAs, which transcriptionally silence established endogenous retroviruses in the germline. This provirus is sweeping through northern koalas, supporting a direct role in adaptive evolution of KoRV-A transcriptional silencing.
ORGANISM(S): Phascolarctos cinereus
PROVIDER: GSE276616 | GEO | 2025/01/15
REPOSITORIES: GEO
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