| Literature DB >> 20546563 |
Ryan K Oyama1, Martina V Silber, Susanne S Renner.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Relatively few species of flowering plants are dioecious and even fewer are known to have sex chromosomes. Current theory posits that homomorphic sex chromosomes, such as found in Bryonia dioica (Cucurbitaceae), offer insight into the early stages in the evolution of sex chromosomes from autosomes. Little is known about these early steps, but an accumulation of transposable element sequences has been observed on the Y-chromosomes of some species with heteromorphic sex chromosomes. Recombination, by which transposable elements are removed, is suppressed on at least part of the emerging Y-chromosome, and this may explain the correlation between the emergence of sex chromosomes and transposable element enrichment.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20546563 PMCID: PMC2898664 DOI: 10.1186/1756-0500-3-166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Res Notes ISSN: 1756-0500
Figure 1Alignment of CW278-Y with a sequence of a . The alignment length is 2340 bp and the length of each sequence is given in brackets at the end. The solo-LTR is in red, the flanking repeats are in blue and the start codon of the retrotransposon is in green (at position 2197 of the alignment). The sequence of the element from Cucumis (GQ326556) presented here is the reverse complement of the sequence in GenBank.
Figure 2Locations of the solo-LTRs within the RLC-sequence. Schematic representation illustrating the locations of the paralogous solo-LTRs. The position numbers at which each insertion begins are in reference to the consensus sequence of RLC_XXX_Bryonia (RLC-sequence), the common Copia-like element in which the solo-LTRs are found. The coding region begins at bp 1131.
Figure 3Southern blots of male and female . Southern blots using (a) the gag domain of the Copia-like sequence and (b) the solo-LTR as probes against male (lanes 1-3) and female (lanes 4-6) genomic DNA of Bryonia dioica. Restriction enzymes used were HindIII (lanes 1 and 4), EcoRI (lanes 2 and 5), and HaeIII (lanes 3 and 6).
Primer sequences used for chromosome and genome walking
| Primer sequences for chromosome walking on the Y-chromosome | |
|---|---|
| GSP7 | 5'-TGCATTTCTACAAGCTATCACCGACC |
| GSP8 | 5'-AGAGACCGTGGGACATGGTGTCACATACCTC |
| GSP16 | 5'-GCCGTGCATAGGAGCAGACTC |
| GSP17 | 5'-AGTGGGTGAGAGGTATGTGACACCATGTC |
| GSP18 | 5'-ACGGTCTCTTCCATTAGGTCGGTGATAGC |
| GSP20 | 5'-AAGGAAGAATTGCGCCAGCAC |
| GSP21 | 5'-CAGCTGATCAAGAGTTACTCCCAGTCAACTG |
| GSP22 | 5'-TCCGGATGCGGTGGCGCATTG |
| GSP23 | 5'-AATGCGCCACCGCATCCGGAC |
| GSP24 | 5'-TCAGGGACCATGACGGTTGC |
| Primer sequences for genome walking to recover retrotransposon sequence | |
| GSP15 | 5'-GGTCTCTTCCATTAGGTCGCACCGTGAG |
| GSP17 | 5'-AGTGGGTGAGAGGTATGTGACACCATGTC |
| GSP19 | 5'-ACTACCCTTCGGTAGATGTTGC |
| GSP19-1 | 5'-TGCAATCAAGACGGGCATTGG |
| GSP19-7 | 5'-CCTTAGAGCTCGTACATTCGGAC |
| GSP19-8 | 5'-CCCAGCAGAACGGTGTATCAG |
| GSP19-9 | 5'-TGGATATGGTTCGCTCTATGATGAGC |
| GSP19-12 | 5'-ATGGTTCGCTCTATGATGAGC |
| GSP19-14 | 5'-GATGGCGTAGAGGATCCACTG |
| GSP19-15 | 5'-TGATGTGGATCGTGACCAGTGG |