| Literature DB >> 27322352 |
Anna Małolepszy1, Terry Mun1, Niels Sandal1, Vikas Gupta1, Manu Dubin2, Dorian Urbański1, Niraj Shah1, Asger Bachmann1, Eigo Fukai3, Hideki Hirakawa4, Satoshi Tabata4, Marcin Nadzieja1, Katharina Markmann1, Junyi Su1, Yosuke Umehara3, Takashi Soyano3, Akira Miyahara3, Shusei Sato5, Makoto Hayashi3, Jens Stougaard1, Stig U Andersen1.
Abstract
Long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons are closely related to retroviruses, and their activities shape eukaryotic genomes. Here, we present a complete Lotus japonicus insertion mutant collection generated by identification of 640 653 new insertion events following de novo activation of the LTR element Lotus retrotransposon 1 (LORE1) (http://lotus.au.dk). Insertion preferences are critical for effective gene targeting, and we exploit our large dataset to analyse LTR element characteristics in this context. We infer the mechanism that generates the consensus palindromes typical of retroviral and LTR retrotransposon insertion sites, identify a short relaxed insertion site motif, and demonstrate selective integration into CHG-hypomethylated genes. These characteristics result in a steep increase in deleterious mutation rate following activation, and allow LORE1 active gene targeting to approach saturation within a population of 134 682 L. japonicus lines. We suggest that saturation mutagenesis using endogenous LTR retrotransposons with germinal activity can be used as a general and cost-efficient strategy for generation of non-transgenic mutant collections for unrestricted use in plant research.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990Lotus japonicuszzm321990; DNA methylation; Long terminal repeat retrotransposon; mutagenesis; palindrome
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27322352 DOI: 10.1111/tpj.13243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417