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Comparative Study
. 1987 Apr;157(2):543-7.
doi: 10.1016/0042-6822(87)90298-4.

Nucleotide conservation of endogenous ecotropic murine leukemia proviruses in inbred mice: implications for viral origin and dispersal

Comparative Study

Nucleotide conservation of endogenous ecotropic murine leukemia proviruses in inbred mice: implications for viral origin and dispersal

S R King et al. Virology. 1987 Apr.

Abstract

Nucleotide sequence analysis of the ecotropic murine leukemia proviruses of AKR, BALB/c, and C57BL/6 mice indicated that these viral genomes differ from each other in less than 0.5% of their sequenced nucleotides, whereas they differ from the laboratory Moloney, Friend, or RadLV viruses or a partial ecotropic provirus found in wild mice by 8-22% of their sequenced nucleotides. The limited variation of endogenous ecotropic proviruses found in these common mouse strains indicates that few cycles of virus replication separated the introduction of the ecotropic endogenous retroviruses into the germlines of the progenitors of these now divergent mouse strains, and is consistent with the hypothesis that these common inbred strains were derived from a pool of very few mice, at least one of which was infected with an ecotropic murine leukemia virus. Ecotropic germline proviruses now found in common inbred mice most likely derive from germline reintegrations of the viral progeny of that initial single infection.

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