News Release

Molecular fossils uncover link between viruses and the immune system

Peer-Reviewed Publication

University of Helsinki

Researchers from the Viikki Biocenter, University of Helsinki, show that atomic structures can reveal evolutionary history of viruses in a similar fashion as fossils did for the dinosaurs and reptiles. Their article is published in the April 15 issue of Molecular Cell.

These "molecular fossils" also revealed that viruses and proteins of immune system share the same structure. One plausible explanation may be that viral building blocks served as precursors for the evolutionary more recent immune system of animals.

These results are an outcome of recent advances in structural biology, a new discipline integrating applied physics, biochemistry and biology, which have permitted detailed comparison of viral structures in atomic detail. Such comparison led to the discovery that viruses without any sequence homology may be related.

Earlier approaches to delineate evolutionary history of viruses have failed. Since Charles Darwin evolutionary history of multicellular organisms has been delineated using fossils, e.g. physical remains of animals and plants. Later genome sequencing provided support for this framework at the molecular level. However, as virus sequences diverge rapidly and they do not leave behind physical fossils due to their small size, these methods could not be used in studies of the evolution of viruses.

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Further information: Roman Tuma, 358-9-1915-9577, email: roman.tuma@helsinki.fi

Article:
Michael C. Merckel, Juha T. Huiskonen, Dennis H. Bamford, Adrian Goldman and Roman Tuma: "The Structure of the Bacteriophage PRD1 Spike Sheds Light on the Evolution of Viral Capsid Architecture"


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