Josephine Bay Paul Center for Comparative Molecular Biology and Evolution, Marine Biological Laboratory, 7 MBL Street, Woods Hole, MA 02543, USA.
Mob DNA. 2010 Apr 1;1(1):12. doi: 10.1186/1759-8753-1-12.
Rotifers of the class Bdelloidea are microscopic freshwater invertebrates best known for: their capacity for anhydrobiosis; the lack of males and meiosis; and for the ability to capture genes from other non-metazoan species. Although genetic exchange between these animals might take place by non-canonical means, the overall lack of meiosis and syngamy should greatly impair the ability of transposable elements (TEs) to spread in bdelloid populations. Previous studies demonstrated that bdelloid chromosome ends, in contrast to gene-rich regions, harbour various kinds of TEs, including specialized telomere-associated retroelements, as well as DNA TEs and retrovirus-like retrotransposons which are prone to horizontal transmission. Vertically-transmitted retrotransposons have not previously been reported in bdelloids and their identification and studies of the patterns of their distribution and evolution could help in the understanding of the high degree of TE compartmentalization within bdelloid genomes.
We identified and characterized a non-long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposon residing primarily in subtelomeric regions of the genome in the bdelloid rotifer Adineta vaga. Contrary to the currently prevailing views on the mode of proliferation of non-LTR retrotransposons, which results in frequent formation of 5'-truncated ('dead-on-arrival') copies due to the premature disengagement of the element-encoded reverse transcriptase from its template, this non-LTR element, Hebe, is represented only by non-5'-truncated copies. Most of these copies, however, were subject to internal deletions associated with microhomologies, a hallmark of non-homologous end-joining events.
The non-LTR retrotransposon Hebe from the bdelloid rotifer A. vaga was found to undergo frequent microhomology-associated deletions, rather than 5'-terminal truncations characteristic of this class of retrotransposons, and to exhibit preference for telomeric localization. These findings represent the first example of a vertically transmitted putatively deleterious TE in bdelloids, and may indicate the involvement of microhomology-mediated non-homologous end-joining in desiccation-induced double-strand break repair at the genome periphery.
蛭形目是一类微小的淡水无脊椎动物,以其以下特征而闻名:它们具有抗干燥能力;缺乏雄性和减数分裂;并且能够从其他非后生动物物种中捕获基因。尽管这些动物之间的遗传交换可能通过非规范途径进行,但减数分裂和合子形成的总体缺乏应该极大地削弱转座元件(TEs)在蛭形目种群中传播的能力。以前的研究表明,与富含基因的区域相比,蛭形目染色体的末端含有各种类型的 TE,包括专门的端粒相关反转录元件,以及易于水平传播的 DNA TE 和类病毒反转录转座子。以前没有报道过垂直传播的反转录转座子在蛭形目动物中,它们的鉴定和分布模式的研究有助于理解 TE 在蛭形目基因组中的高度隔离。
我们鉴定并描述了一种非长末端重复(LTR)反转录转座子,它主要存在于蛭形目轮虫 Adineta vaga 基因组的端粒附近区域。与目前关于非 LTR 反转录转座子增殖模式的观点相反,由于元件编码的逆转录酶过早地与其模板脱离,导致频繁形成 5'截短(“一到就死”)拷贝,这种非 LTR 元件 Hebe 仅由非 5'截短拷贝组成。然而,这些拷贝中的大多数都受到与微同源有关的内部缺失的影响,这是非同源末端连接事件的标志。
从蛭形目轮虫 A. vaga 中发现的非 LTR 反转录转座子 Hebe 经常发生微同源相关缺失,而不是这种反转录转座子的 5'末端截短特征,并表现出对端粒定位的偏好。这些发现代表了第一个垂直传播的、可能具有破坏性的 TE 在蛭形目动物中的例子,并且可能表明微同源介导的非同源末端连接参与了基因组边缘干燥诱导的双链断裂修复。