Department of Philosophy, College of Arts, University of Guelph, Guelph, N1G 2W1, Canada.
Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 2013 Aug;88(3):573-84. doi: 10.1111/brv.12017. Epub 2013 Jan 24.
Considerable variation exists not only in the kinds of transposable elements (TEs) occurring within the genomes of different species, but also in their abundance and distribution. Noting a similarity to the assortment of organisms among ecosystems, some researchers have called for an ecological approach to the study of transposon dynamics. However, there are several ways to adopt such an approach, and it is sometimes unclear what an ecological perspective will add to the existing co-evolutionary framework for explaining transposon-host interactions. This review aims to clarify the conceptual foundations of transposon ecology in order to evaluate its explanatory prospects. We begin by identifying three unanswered questions regarding the abundance and distribution of TEs that potentially call for an ecological explanation. We then offer an operational distinction between evolutionary and ecological approaches to these questions. By determining the amount of variance in transposon abundance and distribution that is explained by ecological and evolutionary factors, respectively, it is possible empirically to assess the prospects for each of these explanatory frameworks. To illustrate how this methodology applies to a concrete example, we analyzed whole-genome data for one set of distantly related mammals and another more closely related group of arthropods. Our expectation was that ecological factors are most informative for explaining differences among individual TE lineages, rather than TE families, and for explaining their distribution among closely related as opposed to distantly related host genomes. We found that, in these data sets, ecological factors do in fact explain most of the variation in TE abundance and distribution among TE lineages across less distantly related host organisms. Evolutionary factors were not significant at these levels. However, the explanatory roles of evolution and ecology become inverted at the level of TE families or among more distantly related genomes. Not only does this example demonstrate the utility of our distinction between ecological and evolutionary perspectives, it further suggests an appropriate explanatory domain for the burgeoning discipline of transposon ecology. The fact that ecological processes appear to be impacting TE lineages over relatively short time scales further raises the possibility that transposons might serve as useful model systems for testing more general hypotheses in ecology.
不仅不同物种基因组中的转座元件 (TEs) 种类存在很大差异,而且它们的丰度和分布也存在很大差异。一些研究人员注意到生态系统中生物种类的相似性,因此呼吁采用生态方法研究转座子的动态。然而,有几种方法可以采用这种方法,而且有时不清楚生态视角将如何为解释转座子-宿主相互作用的现有共同进化框架增添内容。本综述旨在阐明转座子生态学的概念基础,以评估其解释前景。我们首先确定了三个关于 TEs 丰度和分布的未解决问题,这些问题可能需要生态解释。然后,我们对这些问题提供了进化和生态方法之间的操作区分。通过确定生态和进化因素分别解释转座子丰度和分布变化的程度,可以从经验上评估这两种解释框架的前景。为了说明这种方法如何适用于具体示例,我们分析了一组远缘哺乳动物和另一组更近缘的节肢动物的全基因组数据。我们的预期是,生态因素对于解释个体转座子谱系之间的差异最有信息,而不是对于解释 TE 家族之间的差异,并且对于解释它们在近缘宿主基因组中的分布而不是远缘宿主基因组中的分布最有信息。我们发现,在这些数据集,生态因素实际上确实解释了在相对不那么远缘的宿主生物中,TE 谱系之间的 TE 丰度和分布的大部分变化。在这些水平上,进化因素并不重要。然而,在 TE 家族或在更远缘的基因组之间,进化和生态的解释作用发生了反转。这个例子不仅证明了我们在生态和进化视角之间的区分的实用性,而且进一步为新兴的转座子生态学领域提供了一个适当的解释领域。生态过程似乎在相对较短的时间尺度上影响转座子谱系的事实进一步提高了转座子作为测试生态学中更普遍假设的有用模型系统的可能性。