In my great procrastination from writing a report that'll end up being 25% of my over mark this semester, I figured I'd share some of my findings about retroviruses.
These little super amazing biological machines are possibly some of the most interesting things you'll ever encounter in biology, and will most likely be hearing about them in the future for possible gene therapies.
They get their name from their ability to reverse transcribe their RNA genome, into DNA and insert it into the hosts genome. This shit it totally whack, a natural organism evolved the ability to for us to basically use it to cure genetic diseases (which have been done to a very small degree) and hold huuuuuuuge potential for future gene therapies. All because of a super enzyme called reversetranscriptase, hard to figure out what it does eh?
They cause all sorts of interesting nasties as well, HIV being one of them, T-cell leukaemia as well, because of their indiscriminate insertion into the host genome they sometimes insert themselves into the parts that code for your cells normal reproductive mechanisms (oops).
Also, some interesting theories is that they're the cause of us having DNA in the first place, lookup the RNA world theory while you're at it, interesting stuff there...
Anyway, anyone have anything interesting they know about these viruses that they wanna share (I'm desperately looking for more info, especially weird things, about these 'ere viruses)
Also edit: Telomerase reverse transcriptase this enzyme holds the possibilities to cure old age :3
OH AND ALSO: Your genomes about 1/3rd viral DNA, all cause of this bastard enzyme and its viruses infecting sperm and eggs.