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Repeats mimic pathogen-associated patterns across a vast evolutionary landscape

  • Petr Šulc
  • , Andrea Di Gioacchino
  • , Alexander Solovyov
  • , Siyu Sun
  • , Stephen Martis
  • , Sajid A. Marhon
  • , Håvard T. Lindholm
  • , Raymond Chen
  • , Amir Hosseini
  • , Hua Jiang
  • , Bao Han Ly
  • , Martin S. Taylor
  • , Parinaz Mehdipour
  • , Omar Abdel-Wahab
  • , Nicole Rusk
  • , Nicolas Vabret
  • , John LaCava
  • , Daniel D. De Carvalho
  • , Rémi Monasson
  • , Simona Cocco
  • Benjamin D. Greenbaum

Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

Résumé

An emerging hallmark of many human diseases is transcription of typically silenced repetitive DNA containing pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). These PAMPs engage the innate immune system via pattern recognition receptors (PRRs)—a phenomenon known as viral mimicry. We propose a statistical physics framework to quantify viral mimicry by measuring “selective forces” that enrich PAMPs compared to a genome-wide reference distribution. We validate our predictions by identifying repeats that bind different PRRs and show potential viral mimics in different repeat families across eukaryotic genomes, suggesting shared mechanisms drive emergence and retention. We propose two non-exclusive evolutionary hypotheses. The first “repeat-centric” hypothesis posits PAMPs are integral to the repeat life cycle and are therefore enriched as they mediate repeat expansion. The second “organism-centric” hypothesis proposes viral mimicry functions as a cell-intrinsic feedback mechanism for sensing and reacting to transcriptional dysregulation, which provides a selective pressure to maintain PAMPs in genomes.

langue originaleAnglais
Numéro d'article101011
journalCell Genomics
Volume5
Numéro de publication12
Les DOIs
étatPublié - 10 déc. 2025

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