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Invited Review

Chemokine receptor-related viral protein products

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Pages 17-27 | Received 18 Jun 2009, Accepted 02 Sep 2009, Published online: 19 Feb 2010
 

Abstract

Some Herpes-, Pox- and Irido-virus genes (and the controversial Stealth virus gene) share significant nucleotide sequences with vertebrate chemokine receptors (CKR) genes. In some instances the viral reading frame is the same as in the CKRs, giving rise to similar protein products. In other cases the reading frame is different and the viral protein product is not CKR-like. In yet other instances the segmental alignments between CKR genes and viral genes are more limited. In this article we discuss in detail only the more highly significant alignments. We propose the hypothesis that both CKR and CKR-like viral genes originated from a common ancestral gene. This older ancestor may have differentiated into two sequences, one giving rise to the group of extant CKR genes with relatively low levels of similarity with viruses, and the other to the other extant CKRs and the CKR-like viral products. The two extant proteins of the CKR and viral groups which share the maximum amino acid identities are the human CCR3 and the E1 of the Equid herpes virus 2, with a continuous alignment coverage of 73% of the viral molecule. It is thus proposed that the ancestral sequence giving rise to both CKRs and CKR-like viral products may have been similar to the extant human CCR3 and E1 Equid herpes virus 2.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank Dr. Mary Victoria Candace Pragnell for helpful criticisms on the manuscript and Anna Giberna for her skillful secretarial assistance.

Decleration of interest: The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper.

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