endogenous changes - meaning and definition. What is endogenous changes
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What (who) is endogenous changes - definition

INHERITED RETROVIRUS ENCODED IN AN ORGANISM'S GENOME
HERV; Endogenous retroviruses; Human endogenous retrovirus; Human endogenous retroviruses; Endogenous virus; Porcine endogenous retrovirus
  • Diagram displaying the integration of viral DNA into a host genome

Endogenous         
SUBSTANCES & PROCESSES ORIGINATING WITHIN AN ORGANISM, TISSUE, OR CELL
Endogeneous; Endogenic; Endogenous; Endogenetic; Endogeny
·adj Originating from within; increasing by internal growth.
II. Endogenous ·adj Increasing by internal growth and elongation at the summit, instead of externally, and having no distinction of pith, wood, and bark, as the rattan, the palm, the cornstalk.
endogenic         
SUBSTANCES & PROCESSES ORIGINATING WITHIN AN ORGANISM, TISSUE, OR CELL
Endogeneous; Endogenic; Endogenous; Endogenetic; Endogeny
[??nd??'d??n?k]
¦ adjective Geology formed or occurring beneath the surface of the earth. Often contrasted with exogenic.
Endogenetic         
SUBSTANCES & PROCESSES ORIGINATING WITHIN AN ORGANISM, TISSUE, OR CELL
Endogeneous; Endogenic; Endogenous; Endogenetic; Endogeny
·adj Endogenous.

Wikipedia

Endogenous retrovirus

Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are endogenous viral elements in the genome that closely resemble and can be derived from retroviruses. They are abundant in the genomes of jawed vertebrates, and they comprise up to 5–8% of the human genome (lower estimates of ~1%).

ERVs are a vertically inherited proviral sequence and a subclass of a type of gene called a transposon, which can normally be packaged and moved within the genome to serve a vital role in gene expression and in regulation. ERVs however lack most transposon functions, are typically not infectious and are often defective genomic remnants of the retroviral replication cycle. They are distinguished as germline provirus retroelements due to their integration and reverse-transcription into the nuclear genome of the host cell.

Researchers have suggested that retroviruses evolved from a type of transposon called a retrotransposon, a Class I element; these genes can mutate and instead of moving to another location in the genome they can become exogenous or pathogenic. This means that not all ERVs may have originated as an insertion by a retrovirus but that some may have been the source for the genetic information in the retroviruses they resemble. When integration of viral DNA occurs in the germ-line, it can give rise to an ERV, which can later become fixed in the gene pool of the host population.