Litcius/Paper detail

Do some viruses use growth hormone, prolactin and their receptors to facilitate entry into cells?

Michael Wallis

2021BioEssays22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The molecular evolution of pituitary growth hormone and prolactin in mammals shows two unusual features: episodes of markedly accelerated evolution and, in some species, complex families of related proteins expressed in placenta and resulting from multiple gene duplications. Explanations of these phenomena in terms of physiological adaptations seem unconvincing. Here, I propose an alternative explanation, namely that these evolutionary features reflect the use of the hormones (and their receptors) as viral receptors. Episodes of rapid evolution can then be explained as due to "arms races" in which changes in the hormone lead to reduced interaction with the virus, and subsequent changes in the virus counteract this. Placental paralogues of the hormones could provide decoys that bind viruses, and protect the foetus against infection. The hypothesis implies that the extensive changes introduced into growth hormone, prolactin and their receptors during the course of mammalian evolution reflect viral interactions, not endocrine adaptations.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyProlactinReceptorHormoneProlactin receptorEndocrine systemGeneVirusHormone receptorPlacentaGrowth hormoneEvolutionary biologyCell biologyGeneticsEndocrinologyFetusPregnancyCancerBreast cancerViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyVirus-based gene therapy researchAnimal Virus Infections Studies