Litcius/Paper detail

Gag proteins encoded by endogenous retroviruses are required for zebrafish development

Ni‐Chen Chang, Jonathan N. Wells, Andrew Y. Wang, Phillip Schofield, Yi-Chia Huang, Vinh H. Truong, Marcos Simões-Costa, Cédric Feschotte

2025Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Transposable elements (TEs) make up the bulk of eukaryotic genomes and examples abound of TE-derived sequences repurposed for organismal function. The process by which TEs become coopted remains obscure because most cases involve ancient, transpositionally inactive elements. Reports of active TEs serving beneficial functions are scarce and often contentious due to difficulties in manipulating repetitive sequences. Here, we show that recently active TEs in zebrafish encode products critical for embryonic development. Knockdown and rescue experiments demonstrate that the endogenous retrovirus family BHIKHARI-1 (Bik-1) encodes a Gag protein essential for mesoderm development. Mechanistically, Bik-1 Gag associates with the cell membrane, and its ectopic expression in chicken embryos alters cell migration. Similarly, depletion of BHIKHARI-2 Gag, a relative of Bik-1, causes defects in neural crest development in zebrafish. We propose an "addiction" model to explain how active TEs can be integrated into conserved developmental processes.

Topics & Concepts

ZebrafishEndogenous retrovirusBiologyTransposable elementRetrovirusEctopic expressionCell biologyMesodermNeural crestEmbryonic stem cellGenomeGene knockdownEndogenyCaenorhabditis elegansGeneticsComputational biologyEmbryoGeneEndocrinologyChromosomal and Genetic VariationsCongenital heart defects researchCRISPR and Genetic Engineering