CONTRIBUTIONS OF ENDOGENOUS LTRs TO TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGULATION OF HUMAN GENES

CONTRIBUTIONS OF

ENDOGENOUS LTRs TO TRANSCRIPTIONAL REGULATION OF HUMAN GENES

Dixie

L. Mager. Terry Fox Laboratory, BC Cancer Agency and Dept. of Medical Genetics,

University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada

 

 

 

 

Through Laboratory screens

and genome-wide bioinformatics searches, we have identified numerous examples of

human genes that utilize an endogenous retroviral long terminal repeat (LTR) as

a transcriptional promoter or polyadenylation signal.  In most cases, the LTR

promoter of the gene is one of several alternative promoters but, for some

genes, the LTR is the major or only known promoter.  Thus, it is clear that some

retroviral LTRs have assumed important gene regulatory roles after integration

into the genome.  Several examples of this phenomenon will be presented and the

potential significance of these findings will be discussed.