19 Evolutionary History of Reverse Transcriptase
Abstract
Genetic elements with amino acid sequence identity to the conserved motifs of the retroviral RT domain are considered to be members of the retroid family (Fuetterer and Hohn 1987). This family is composed of retroviruses, two different classes of DNA viruses, two distinct types of retrotransposons, retroposons, group II introns and plasmids of cellular organelles, an orphan group, the retrons of bacteria, and the telomere elongation protein (EST1) of yeast (Fig. 1). The retroid family subgroups are described briefly here to provide the necessary context for the discussion of the evolution of the RT and RNase H domains. A more detailed description of many of the family members can be found in other chapters in this volume.
Retroviruses
The retroviral genome generally encodes structural proteins: a matrix protein (MA), a capsid protein (CA) that forms an icosahedron-like shell, a ribonuclear protein (NC) that associates with the viral RNA, and an envelope protein that inserts into the...
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PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.425-444