| Literature DB >> 18021408 |
Johan G de Boer1, Ryosuke Yazawa, William S Davidson, Ben F Koop.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Several genome duplications have occurred in the evolutionary history of teleost fish. In returning to a stable diploid state, the polyploid genome reorganized, and large portions are lost, while the fish lines evolved to numerous species. Large scale transposon movement has been postulated to play an important role in the genome reorganization process. We analyzed the DNA sequence of several large loci in Salmo salar and other species for the presence of DNA transposon families.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 18021408 PMCID: PMC2198921 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-8-422
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree of DNA transposon sequences in . A) Tc1-like DNA transposons; B) piggyBac-like DNA transposons. Sequence alignments were performed with ClustalW and phylogenetic trees generated with MEGA3.1 using the Unweighted Pair Group Method with Arithmetic Mean (UPGMA), pairwise deletion, and a p-distance model. Sequences used in the tree are at least 1000 bp, but EST sequences from Schistosoma japonicum are between 500 and 700 bp long. DTSsa3 is not included in the tree as only fragments of a few hundred base pairs were recovered that conform to the amino acid motifs required for a Tc1-like transposon. DTSsa5 has two copies that are closely related due to a recent duplication event. Shown below are the color markers for the species. No marker in the tree indicates Salmo salar. All others are: Acanthophthalmus kuhli; Astatotilapia burtoni; Carassius auratus; Cyprinus carpio; Danio rerio; Deltistes luxatus; Esox lucius; Gasterosteus aculeatus; Ictalurus punctatus; Oncorhynchus kisutch; Oncorhynchus mykiss; ; Oryzias latipes; Petromyzon marinus; Polypterus bichir; Rana pipiens; Salvelinus fontinalis; Schistosoma japonicum; Tanichthys albonubus; Xenopus tropicalis; Xenopus laevis.
Features of the 14 DNA transposon families found in Salmo salar.
| DTSsa01 | 5'-TA-3' | CAGT | 200 | 1600 | Tc1 |
| DTSsa02 | TA | CACT | ~40 | 1600 | Tc1 |
| DTSsa03 | TA | ND | ND | ND | Tc1 |
| DTSsa04 | TA | CAGT | 244 | 1530 | Tc1 |
| DTSsa05 | TA | AACT | ~18 | 1440 | Tc1 |
| DTSsa06 | ND | ND | ND | ND | Tc1 |
| DTSsa07 | TA | CACT | ~20 | ND | Tc1 |
| SSTN1 | TA | CAGT | 206 | 1570 | Tc1 |
| DTSsa09 | TA | CAGT | 212 | ND | Tc1 |
| DTSsa10 | TA | CAGT | 199 | ND | Tc1 |
| Tss | TA | CAGT | 243 | ND | Tc1 |
| SALT1 | TA | CAGT | 204 | ND | Tc1 |
| pTSsa1 | TTAA | CCTG | ~22 | 1440 | piggyBac |
| pTSsa2 | TTAA | CCTG | ~22 | 1440 | piggyBac |
§: Approximate length of sequences
ND: Not determined
Figure 2Terminal repeat structure. Inverted Terminal Repeat of examples of recovered members of the DTSsa1 (upper sequence) and SSTN1 (lower sequence) families. The TA insertion site is shown at the start of the sequences, followed by the canonical CAGT. The two direct repeated sequences at the two ends of an ITR are in bold and underlined.
Recovered transposon families found in sequences from other species.
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Genbank accession numbers indicate the sequence(s) in which the element was found.
Figure 3Bursts of DNA transposon activity. Horizontal bars represent the duration of bursts of Tc1-like DNA transposon in Salmo salar, based on earliest and latest branching. The shaded areas indicate the approximate timing of the genome duplication event (left) and further speciation events [4] (right).