The two Drosophila telomeric transposable elements have very different patterns of transcription
Autor: | Mary Lou Pardue, K L Traverse, P. G. DeBaryshe, N C Hogan, Olga N. Danilevskaya |
---|---|
Rok vydání: | 1998 |
Předmět: |
Transposable element
Intracellular Fluid animal structures DNA Complementary Retroelements Transcription Genetic Molecular Sequence Data Retrotransposon Genes Insect Biology Transcription (biology) Coding region Animals RNA Antisense Molecular Biology Gene Conserved Sequence Genetics Transcriptional Regulation Base Sequence Terminal Repeat Sequences RNA Nucleic Acid Hybridization RNA-Directed DNA Polymerase Cell Biology Telomere biology.organism_classification Open reading frame Drosophila melanogaster DNA Transposable Elements Drosophila yakuba |
Zdroj: | Molecular and cellular biology. 19(1) |
ISSN: | 0270-7306 |
Popis: | The transposable elements HeT-A and TART constitute the telomeres of Drosophila chromosomes. Both are non-long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons, sharing the remarkable property of transposing only to chromosome ends. In addition, strong sequence similarity of their gag proteins indicates that these coding regions share a common ancestor. These findings led to the assumption that HeT-A and TART are closely related. However, we now find that these elements produce quite different sets of transcripts. HeT-A produces only sense-strand transcripts of the full-length element, whereas TART produces both sense and antisense full-length RNAs, with antisense transcripts in more than 10-fold excess over sense RNA. In addition, features of TART sequence organization resemble those of a subclass of non-LTR elements characterized by unequal terminal repeats. Thus, the ancestral gag sequence appears to have become incorporated in two different types of elements, possibly with different functions in the telomere. HeT-A transcripts are found in both nuclear and cytoplasmic cell fractions, consistent with roles as both mRNA and transposition template. In contrast, both sense and antisense TART transcripts are almost entirely concentrated in nuclear fractions. Also, TART open reading frame 2 probes detect a cytoplasmic mRNA for reverse transcriptase (RT), with no similarity to TART sequence 5′ or 3′ of the RT coding region. This RNA could be a processed TART transcript or the product of a “free-standing” RT gene. Either origin would be novel. The distinctive transcription patterns of both HeT-A and TART are conserved in Drosophila yakuba, despite significant sequence divergence. The conservation argues that these sets of transcripts are important to the function(s) of HeT-A and TART. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
Externí odkaz: |