Endogenous Bornavirus Like Nucleoprotein 2 (EBLN2)

Endogenous Borna-Like N Element-2

Endogenous Bornavirus Like Nucleoprotein 2 (EBLN2)
Retroviruses are the only group of viruses known to have left a fossil record, in the form of endogenous proviruses, and approximately 8% of the human genome is made up of these elements. Bornaviruses, a genus of non-segmented, negative-sense RNA virus, are unique among RNA viruses in that they establish persistent infection in the cell nucleus. Some of the primate EBLNs contain an intact ORF and are expressed as mRNA. Phylogenetic analyses showed that EBLNs seem to have been generated by different insertional events in each specific animal family. Furthermore, the EBLN of a ground squirrel was formed by a recent integration event, whereas those in primates must have been formed more than 40 million years ago. The N mRNA of a current mammalian bornavirus, Borna disease virus (BDV), can form EBLN-like elements in the genomes of persistently infected cultured cells.

Organism species: Homo sapiens (Human)