More Ancient Viruses Lurk in Our DNA than We Thought

One whole endogenous retrovirus genome–and bits of 17 others–were spotted in a study of 2,500 human genomes

Written byUniversity of Michigan
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ANN ARBOR, Mich. Think your DNA is all human? Think again. And a new discovery suggests it’s even less human than scientists previously thought.

Nineteen new pieces of DNA–left by viruses that first infected our ancestors hundreds of thousands of years ago–have just been found, lurking between our own genes.

And one stretch of newfound DNA, found in about 50 of the 2,500 people studied, contains an intact, full genetic recipe for an entire virus, say the scientists who published their findings Mar. 22 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Whether or not it can replicate, or reproduce, it isn’t yet known. But other studies of ancient virus DNA have shown it can affect the humans who carry it.

Related Article: New Insights on an Ancient Plague Could Improve Treatments for Infections

In addition to finding these new stretches, the scientists also confirmed 17 other pieces of virus DNA found in human genomes by other scientists in recent years.

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