| Literature DB >> 28025339 |
Min-Jin Han1, Qiu-Zhong Zhou2, Hua-Hao Zhang3, Xiaoling Tong1, Cheng Lu1, Ze Zhang2, Fangyin Dai4.
Abstract
Miniature inverted-repeat transposable elements (MITEs) have attracted much attention due to their widespread occurrence and high copy numbers in eukaryotic genomes. However, the systematic knowledge about MITEs in insects and other animals is still lacking. In this study, we identified 6012 MITE families from 98 insect species genomes. Comparison of these MITEs with known MITEs in the NCBI non-redundant database and Repbase showed that 5701(∼95%) of 6012 MITE families are novel. The abundance of MITEs varies drastically among different insect species, and significantly correlates with genome size. In general, larger genomes contain more MITEs than small genomes. Furthermore, all identified MITEs were included in a newly constructed database (iMITEdb) (http://gene.cqu.edu.cn/iMITEdb/), which has functions such as browse, search, BLAST and download. Overall, our results not only provide insight on insect MITEs but will also improve assembly and annotation of insect genomes. More importantly, the results presented in this study will promote studies of MITEs function, evolution and application in insects. DATABASE URL: http://gene.cqu.edu.cn/iMITEdb/.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 28025339 PMCID: PMC5199201 DOI: 10.1093/database/baw148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Database (Oxford) ISSN: 1758-0463 Impact factor: 3.451
Figure 1.Characteristics of each MITEs superfamily in insect genomes. (A) Structure of each superfamily. TSDs sequence and TIRs are shown. (B) Amount of nucleotide covered of each superfamily in 98 insect genomes. (C) The number of families and copies of each superfamily in the investigated insect genomes. Numbers in parenthesis represents ‘families/copies’. (D) The distribution of consensus sequence length for each MITE superfamily.
Figure 2.Distribution and abundance of MITEs in 98 insect genomes. (A) Amount of nucleotide covered of MITEs in each insect genome. Same color bars represent the same insect order. Numbers represent MITEs abundance (in megabase) in different insect genomes. (B) Distribution of MITEs superfamily in each insect genome, color boxes indicated presence; numbers within the color box represent the number of families.
Figure 3.Correlation between the abundance of MITEs and genome size. Histogram above the graph (in red) represents distribution of genome size (unit—1000 megabase). Histogram below the graph (in blue) represents the distribution of MITEs abundance (unit—megabase). Correlation analysis was performed using the R program with the Pearson’s method.
Figure 4.The web interface of iMITEdb. The interfaces had browse, search, blast, download, links and contacts.