Has anyone read the full paper?
I haven't been able to access it.
It appears that there's a lot of speculation here which may or may not be correct and can be interpreted several ways. Nothing wrong with speculation per se but I just like to get as much information as possible.
Agreed. But there is some helpful info in the abstract.
I googled this paper and all I got was the abstract and the o'keefe blog and I'm not sure what people are speculating here is in sync with what she is saying. It may very well be.
I've been basing my interpretation of the Mayer paper on the abstract. But you're right, we need to read the full paper to fully understand it.
From what I read above, I get the feeling that she is talking about a relative young retrovirus but is also saying that probability is a factor when determinating this. Anything is possible but is this probable? She is unclear about this and I would think the probability of an event happening is an important piece of information.
They do seem to have detected PreXMRV-2-like gag genes in the wild.
I haven't read the discussion thread that you are quoting from, but any discussion relating to probabilities would probably be in relation to how and where a virus was created: because it's not possible to determine exactly when or how a virus was created. And also, what relationship a virus has with another virus, specifically the relationship between the new gag sequences and the PreXMRV-2 gag gene.
So, what is the relationship between the new sequences to those in the Paprotka paper?
But I'm not sure if the answer to that question matters, since PreXMRV-2 was not detected in the xenografts in the Paprotka paper anyway. And definitely not the gag gene. Only a tiny snippet of the LTR region was detected, but that does not conclusively indicate that PreXMRV-2 was present, as far as my understanding goes.
The gag gene for PreXMRV-2 was only detected as gDNA in the mouse genomes that might have been used for the xenografts.
My first question would be does this study really refute previous research.
The Paprotka study was not conclusive, but was based on many assumptions. The Paprotka paper seems to describe quite a good hypothetical model, and maybe a convincing model for some people, but it was not a conclusive one. Their conclusion that PreXMRV-1 combined with PreXMRV-2 to create XMRV is purely based on assumptions, probabilities and deductions. For example, they haven't actually detected any active virus, or viral RNA, for either of the two pre-viruses, as far as I can see. And they didn't find PreXMRV-2 gDNA in any of the xenograpfts. They only found a tiny snippet of gDNA that they assume relates to PreXMRV-2, but not even a gag, pol or env gene. Even if they had found the full sequence of PreXMRV-2 (and they say it was
probably present in some of the mice used in the xenografts), it is still quite a jump to assume that they know how XMRV was created, because there are so many possibilities, as was explained in a published paper that refutes the Paprotka model (I can't remember which one, but there was one that downplayed the certainty of Paprotka, and discussed the possibilities of recombination events).
I think that the new finding of PreXMRV-2-like gag genes in the wild does give more credibility to theories other than the Paprotka model:
Firstly that PreXMRV-1 could also be present in the wild (if we don't already know this?)
Secondly, that XMRV-like viruses would have had far more of a chance to be created in the wild than in an isolated cell line, if PreXMRV-2 is in the wild.
Thirdly, that an unknown XMRV-like virus could have infected the cell line from an external source.
Or fourthly, that XMRV could have been created in the wild, and that's how it entered the cell line.
(XMRV, or an XMRV-like virus, could yet prove to be a mouse virus or a human virus.)
But like I said, Paprotka was a hypothetical model of the creation of XMRV, and was not conclusive.
And we do need full access to the new paper.