| Literature DB >> 20813032 |
Kathryn A O'Donnell1, Kathleen H Burns.
Abstract
Transposable elements (TEs) comprise a large fraction of mammalian genomes. A number of these elements are actively jumping in our genomes today. As a consequence, these insertions provide a source of genetic variation and, in rare cases, these events cause mutations that lead to disease. Yet, the extent to which these elements impact their host genomes is not completely understood. This review will summarize our current understanding of the mechanisms underlying transposon regulation and the contribution of TE insertions to genetic diversity in the germline and in somatic cells. Finally, traditional methods and emerging technologies for identifying transposon insertions will be considered.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20813032 PMCID: PMC2941744 DOI: 10.1186/1759-8753-1-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mob DNA
Studies describing long interspersed nucleotide element (LINE)-1 hypomethylation in malignant tissues.
| Tumor | Evidence for LINE hypomethylation | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Breast cancer | 5' flanking sequences of hypomethylated L1 homo sapien elements were isolated from T-47 D cells by inverse polymerase chain reaction (PCR) | [ |
| Chronic myeloid leukaemia (blast phase) | Methylation-specific PCR of primary samples; hypomethylation associated with blast crisis, high levels of BCR-ABL messenger RNA, resistance to tyrosine kinase inhibitor chemotherapy | [ |
| Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia | A variety of primary specimens analysed by | [ |
| Colorectal adenocarcinoma | As compared to neighbouring normal colon; | [ |
| Hepatocellular carcinoma | Hepatocellular carcinomas compared to surrounding cirrhotic liver; | [ |
| Neuroendocrine tumours | Well-differentiated pancreatic endocrine and carcinoid tumours compared to surrounding tissue; LINE hypomethylation correlates with lymph node metastasis and cytogenetic aberrations | [ |
| Prostate cancer | Adenocarcinoma compared to surrounding tissue; hypomethylation of L1 s associated with preoperative PSA, Gleason grade, and clinical stage; associated independently with cytogenetic abnormalities | [ |
| Urothelial carcinoma | L1 hypomethylation detected by Southern blot in most specimens | [ |
Figure 1Techniques for identifying transposon insertions. (A) Polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-based assays detect transposable element (TE) insertions. L1 display utilizes primers specific to particular subfamilies of LINE-1 elements. Using this method, candidate dimorphic L1 insertions have been identified. The ATLAS technique employs the principles of L1 display and suppression PCR. Genomic DNA is digested and ligated to oligonucleotide primers, and used as a template in a PCR reaction containing L1 and linker-specific primers. Primary PCR products are then used as templates in a linear PCR reaction containing a radiolabelled subfamily-specific L1 primer. Radiolabelled products are detected by electrophoresis and autoradiography. (B) A comparative genomics approach to identify TE insertions and deletions is depicted. For example, the completion of the draft chimpanzee genome sequence provided an opportunity to identify recently mobilized transposons in humans and chimpanzees. If a transposon insertion is present in only one of the two genomes, it is inferred that the insertion occurred since the existence of their most common recent ancestor (~6 million years ago). (C) A paired-end mapping approach is shown. This method entails generating paired-ends of several kilobase fragments, which are sequenced using next generation sequencing methodologies. Differences between the paired-end reads and a reference genomic region reveal the presence of structural variation. Simple insertions and deletions can be detected using this method. (D) A next generation sequencing method is shown. Selective amplification of the 3' end of a transposon is performed followed by deep sequencing. This short-read sequencing approach is able to detect precise insertion positions. (E) Microrray-based methods involve the hybridization of ligation-mediated PCR products to genomic tiling arrays. Specifically, vectorettes are ligated to restriction enzyme-digested genomic DNA. The amplified fragments include the 3' end of a transposon sequence and unique flanking genomic DNA. These amplicons are hybridized to genomic tiling microarrays.