The retroposition, in which the processed mRNA from parental genes undergoes reverse transcription and the resulting cDNA is integrated back into the genome, results in additional copies of existing genes. Despite the initial misconception, retroposition-derived copies can become functional, and due to their role in the molecular evolution of genomes, they have been named the “seeds of evolution”. It is convincing that retrogenes, as important elements involved in the evolution of species, also take part in the evolution of neoplastic tumor at the cell and species levels. The occurrence of specific “resistance mechanisms” to neoplastic transformation in some species has been noted. This phenomenon in some cases has been related to additional gene copies, including retrogenes. In addition, retrogene expression correlates with the occurrence of specific cancer subtypes, their stages, and their response to therapy. Phylogenetic insights into retrogenes show that most cancer-related retrocopies arose in the lineage of primates, and the number of identified cancer-related retrogenes demonstrates that these duplicates are quite important players in human carcinogenesis.


| Retrocopy | Ensembl ID | RetrogeneDB ID [51] | Chromosome | Parental Gene | Cancer Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| KRASP1 | ENSG00000220635 | retro_hsap_3474 | 6 | KRAS | prostate cancer [52] |
| UTP14C | ENSG00000253797 | retro_hsap_29 | 13 | UTP14A | ovarian cancer [53] |
| MSL3P1 | ENSG00000224287 | retro_hsap_2401 | 2 | MSL3 | renal cell carcinoma [54] |
| ANXA2P2 | ENSG00000231991 | retro_hsap_4150 | 9 | ANXA2 | hepatocellular carcinoma [55] |
| CSDAP1 (YBX3P1) | ENSG00000261614 | retro_hsap_1674 | 16 | YBX3 | lung adenocarcinoma [56] |
| LGMNP1 | ENSG00000214269 | retro_hsap_1272 | 13 | LGMN | glioblastoma [57] |
| UBE2CP3 | ENSG00000250384 | retro_hsap_2935 | 4 | UBE2C | hepatocellular carcinoma [58] |
| RACGAP1P | ENSG00000257331 | - | 12 | RACGAP1 | hepatocellular carcinoma [59] |
| PTTG3P | ENSG00000213005 | - | 8 | PTTG1 | breast cancer [60] |
| CKS1BP7 | ENSG00000254331 | - | 8 | CKS1B | breast cancer [61] |
| PTENP1 | ENSG00000237984 | retro_hsap_4245 | 9 | PTEN | hepatocellular carcinoma [62], gastric cancer [63], renal cell carcinoma [64] |
| INTS6P1 | ENSG00000250492 | retro_hsap_3307 | 5 | INTS6 | hepatocellular carcinoma [65] |
| TUSC2P1 | ENSG00000285470 | - | Y | TUSC2 | esophageal squamous cell carcinoma [66] |
| NKAPL | ENSG00000189134 | retro_hsap_15 | 6 | NKAP | kidney renal papillary cell carcinoma, pancreatic adenocarcinoma, adenoid cystic carcinoma [67] |
| CTNNA1P1 | ENSG00000249026 | - | 5 | CTNNA1 | colorectal cancer [68] |
| RHOB | ENSG00000143878 | retro_hsap_108 | 2 | RHOA | renal cell carcinoma [69], lung cancer [70], colorectal cancer [71] |
| HMGA1P6 | ENSG00000233440 | retro_hsap_1175 | 13 | HMGA1 | endometrial carcinoma [72], ovarian carcinosarcoma, thyroid carcinoma [44] |
| HMGA1P7 | ENSG00000216753 | - | 6 | HMGA1 | endometrial carcinoma [72], ovarian carcinosarcoma, thyroid carcinoma [44], breast cancer [73] |
| SUMO1P3 | ENSG00000235082 | retro_hsap_240 | 1 | SUMO1 | hepatocellular carcinoma [74], gastric cancer [75], colorectal cancer [76] |
| NANOGP8 | ENSG00000255192 | retro_hsap_1549 | 15 | NANOG | gastric cancer [77], prostate cancer [78] |
| POU5F1P4 (OCT4-pg4) | ENSG00000237872 | - | 1 | POU5F1 | hepatocellular carcinoma [8] |
| POU5F1P5 (OCT4-pg5) | ENSG00000236375 | - | 10 | POU5F1 | endometrial carcinoma [79] |
| SLC6A6P1 | ENSG00000226818 | retro_hsap_2498 | 21 | SLC6A6 | ovarian cancer [80] |
| PDIA3P1 | ENSG00000180867 | retro_hsap_217 | 1 | PDIA3 | multiple myeloma [49] |
| PPIAP43 | ENSG00000255059 | retro_hsap_816 | 11 | PPIA | small cell lung cancer [46] |
| FTH1P3 | ENSG00000213453 | retro_hsap_2240 | 2 | FTH1 | breast cancer [47] |
| E2F3P1 | ENSG00000267046 | retro_hsap_1749 | 17 | E2F3 | hepatocellular carcinoma [81] |


This entry is adapted from the peer-reviewed paper 10.3390/life11010072