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SINEs, evolution and genome structure in the opossum
Short INterspersed Elements (SINEs) are non-autonomous retrotransposons, usually between 100 and 500 base pairs (bp) in length, which are ubiquitous components of eukaryotic genomes. Their activity, distribution, and evolution can be highly informative on genomic structure and evolutionary processes...
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Published in: | Gene 2007-07, Vol.396 (1), p.46-58 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Short INterspersed Elements (SINEs) are non-autonomous retrotransposons, usually between 100 and 500 base pairs (bp) in length, which are ubiquitous components of eukaryotic genomes. Their activity, distribution, and evolution can be highly informative on genomic structure and evolutionary processes. To determine recent activity, we amplified more than one hundred
SINE1 loci in a panel of 43
M. domestica individuals derived from five diverse geographic locations. The
SINE1 family has expanded recently enough that many loci were polymorphic, and the
SINE1 insertion-based genetic distances among populations reflected geographic distance. Genome-wide comparisons of
SINE1 densities and GC content revealed that high
SINE1 density is associated with high GC content in a few long and many short spans. Young
SINE1s, whether fixed or polymorphic, showed an unbiased GC content preference for insertion, indicating that the GC preference accumulates over long time periods, possibly in periodic bursts.
SINE1 evolution is thus broadly similar to human
Alu evolution, although it has an independent origin. High GC content adjacent to
SINE1s is strongly correlated with bias towards higher AT to GC substitutions and lower GC to AT substitutions. This is consistent with biased gene conversion, and also indicates that like chickens, but unlike eutherian mammals, GC content heterogeneity (isochore structure) is reinforced by substitution processes in the
M. domestica genome. Nevertheless, both high and low GC content regions are apparently headed towards lower GC content equilibria, possibly due to a relative shift to lower recombination rates in the recent
Monodelphis ancestral lineage. Like eutherians, metatherian (marsupial) mammals have evolved high CpG substitution rates, but this is apparently a convergence in process rather than a shared ancestral state. |
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ISSN: | 0378-1119 1879-0038 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.gene.2007.02.028 |