AUTHOR=Chabukswar Saili , Grandi Nicole , Tramontano Enzo TITLE=Prolonged activity of HERV-K(HML2) in Old World Monkeys accounts for recent integrations and novel recombinant variants JOURNAL=Frontiers in Microbiology VOLUME=Volume 13 - 2022 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/microbiology/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2022.1040792 DOI=10.3389/fmicb.2022.1040792 ISSN=1664-302X ABSTRACT=Around 8% of the human genome comprises Endogenous Retroviruses (HERVs) acquired over primate evolution. Some are specific to primates such as HERV-K, consisting of 10 HML subtypes. Particularly, HML2 is the youngest clade, having some human specific integrations, whose presence and distribution in non-human primates remains poorly characterized. To investigate HML2 distribution in non-human primates, the present study focused on the characterization of HML2 in Macaca fascicularis and Macaca mulatta that are the most evolutionarily distant species related to humans in the Catarrhini parvorder. We identified overall 208 HML2 proviruses of which 77 in M. fascicularis and 131 in M. mulatta. Among them 46 proviruses are shared by the two species while the others are species-specific. Only 12 proviruses were shared with humans, confirming that the major wave of HML2 diffusion in humans occurred after macaques’ divergence. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed structural variations between HML2 macaques’ species-specific proviruses, and the ones shared between macaques and humans. The HML2 loci were characterized in terms of structure, focusing on potential residual open reading frames for gag and env genes for latter being reported to be expressed in human pathological conditions. The analysis identified highly conserved gag genes while the env genes had a very divergent nature. Of the 208 HML2 proviral sequences present in Macaca species, 81 sequences form a cluster having a MER11A, a characteristic HML8 LTR sequence, insertion in the env region indicating a recombination event that occurred between the HML2 env gene and the HML8 LTR. This recombination event, which was shown to be present only in a subset of macaques’ shared sequences and species-specific sequences, highlights a recent viral activity leading to the emergence of an env variant specific to the Old World Monkeys (OWMs). We performed an exhaustive analysis of HML2 in two OWMs species, in terms of its evolutionary history, structural features and potential residual coding capacity highlighting a recent activity of HML2 in macaques that occurred after its split from the Catarrhini parvorder, leading to the emergence of viral variants. Hence providing a better understanding of the endogenization and diffusion of HML2 along the primate evolution.