20 Reverse Transcription and Evolution
Abstract
Like much of evolutionary biology, this discussion will include speculation and reliance on untested assumptions. In at least one respect, we are fortunate. The high error rates of retroviral reverse transcriptases, combined with the relatively short generation times of the genomes they replicate, provide observable evolutionary changes in experimentally tractable time frames. Lessons learned from this sort of change can illuminate the larger evolutionary picture. Thus, in experimental time, we can observe the acquisition and loss of viral genes, the evolution of populations by accumulation of mutation and recombination events, and the effects on the host cell and organism of the insertion of reverse transcripts into the genome. For these reasons, this discussion concentrates on retroviruses, with reference to some less easily studied systems — LINEs and pseudogenes —which are products of reverse transcription and constitute a...
Full Text:
PDFDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/0.445-479