Ancient Viral DNA's Crucial Role in Embryo Development

Researchers have discovered a link between a 500-million-year-old viral infection and the early stages of embryo development, shedding new light on the role of endogenous retroviruses in regulating pluripotency factors. The study, conducted on mouse embryos, identified a retroviral protein called MERVL-gag that influences the transition from totipotent to pluripotent cells, a crucial step in embryo specialization. This finding has implications for artificial embryo creation, regenerative medicine, and understanding fertility issues, highlighting the important functions of ancient retroviruses that have co-evolved with complex organisms over millions of years.
- Embryo Development Linked to a 500 Million Year Old Viral Infection ScienceAlert
- Our 'Junk' DNA Actually Plays a Vital Role in Embryonic Development Popular Mechanics
- Endogenous retroviruses shape pluripotency specification in mouse embryos Science
- Study finds ancient virus DNA crucial for human development Gwinnettdailypost.com
- Relics of ancient viral DNA guide embryo development EL PA��S USA
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