2012
DOI: 10.1128/jvi.01164-12
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The First Full-Length Endogenous Hepadnaviruses: Identification and Analysis

Abstract: In silico screening of metazoan genome data identified multiple endogenous hepadnaviral elements in the budgerigar ( Melopsittacus undulatus ) genome, most notably two elements comprising about 1.3× and 1.0× the full-length genome. Phylogenetic and molecular dating analyses show that endogenous budgerigar hepatitis B viruses (eBHBV) share an ancestor with extant avihepadnaviruses and infiltrated the budgerigar genome millions of years ago. Identification of full-length genom… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…10), as well as a full-length or nearly full-length copy of the hepadnaviral genome [8,18,26,54]. In snakes, the eSHBVs are 316-370 aa long, with 48-67% aa similarity (K2P distance ¼ 0.63 -0.83) to the avihepadnavirus polymerase and cover about 37% of the duck hepadnavirus genome, which is 3021 bp long.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…10), as well as a full-length or nearly full-length copy of the hepadnaviral genome [8,18,26,54]. In snakes, the eSHBVs are 316-370 aa long, with 48-67% aa similarity (K2P distance ¼ 0.63 -0.83) to the avihepadnavirus polymerase and cover about 37% of the duck hepadnavirus genome, which is 3021 bp long.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our phylogenetic analyses of the pol protein from eZHBV HASs and extant HBVs reveal three ancient lineages of zebra finch eZHBV EVEs (also when including very recently published 24,25 budgerigar HBV EVEs, Supplementary Fig. S3) and further insights into early hepadnaviral evolution (Fig.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We anticipate that this will be of significance to a variety of disciplines involved in studying HBVs or their hosts, including medical research and palaeontology. Additionally, our results emphasize the importance of conducting comprehensive presence/absence analyses in addition to the computational extraction 24,25 of paleoviral sequences. With the foreseeable sequencing of a wealth of animal genomes 28 , we expect that our Mesozoic paleovirus genome is just the tip of the iceberg of prehistoric virus genomes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, it remains unknown whether the presence of some of these EVEs in close relatives is due to orthologous insertion in their respective common ancestor or to independent germline infiltrations. On the other hand, hepadnavirus EVEs have been reported from all analyzed bird genomes except for Galliformes (chicken and turkey) . They exhibit higher copy numbers than other non‐retroviral EVEs, and presence/absence analyses of some hepadnavirus EVE orthologs have shown that germline infiltrations occurred throughout avian evolution, from the neoavian ancestor to recent divergences within estrildid finches .…”
Section: The Diversity Of Avian Transposons and Endogenous Viral Elemmentioning
confidence: 99%