Dunkthebiscuit Kendrick

41%
Flag icon
Endogenous retroviruses can linger in their hosts for millions of years. In 2009, Aris Katzourakis, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Oxford, discovered hundreds of copies of endogenous retroviruses in the genome of the three-toed sloth. Their genes closely matched those of foamy viruses, free-living pathogens that infect primates and other mammals. Katzourakis concluded that foamy viruses infected the common ancestor of three-toed sloths and primates, which lived a hundred million years ago. In primates, they’ve remained free-living. In the sloth lineage, however, they became ...more
A Planet of Viruses
Rate this book
Clear rating