927 resultados para Transposable elements
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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The evolution of eusociality is one of the major transitions in evolution, but the underlying genomic changes are unknown. We compared the genomes of 10 bee species that vary in social complexity, representing multiple independent transitions in social evolution, and report three major findings. First, many important genes show evidence of neutral evolution as a consequence of relaxed selection with increasing social complexity. Second, there is no single road map to eusociality; independent evolutionary transitions in sociality have independent genetic underpinnings. Third, though clearly independent in detail, these transitions do have similar general features, including an increase in constrained protein evolution accompanied by increases in the potential for gene regulation and decreases in diversity and abundance of transposable elements. Eusociality may arise through different mechanisms each time, but would likely always involve an increase in the complexity of gene networks.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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The Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains widely used for industrial fuel-ethanol production have been developed by selection, but their underlying beneficial genetic polymorphisms remain unknown. Here, we report the draft whole-genome sequence of the S. cerevisiae strain CAT-1, which is a dominant fuel-ethanol fermentative strain from the sugarcane industry in Brazil. Our results indicate that strain CAT-1 is a highly heterozygous diploid yeast strain, and the similar to 12-Mb genome of CAT-1, when compared with the reference S228c genome, contains similar to 36,000 homozygous and similar to 30,000 heterozygous single nucleotide polymorphisms, exhibiting an uneven distribution among chromosomes due to large genomic regions of loss of heterozygosity (LOH). In total, 58 % of the 6,652 predicted protein-coding genes of the CAT-1 genome constitute different alleles when compared with the genes present in the reference S288c genome. The CAT-1 genome contains a reduced number of transposable elements, as well as several gene deletions and duplications, especially at telomeric regions, some correlated with several of the physiological characteristics of this industrial fuel-ethanol strain. Phylogenetic analyses revealed that some genes were likely associated with traits important for bioethanol production. Identifying and characterizing the allelic variations controlling traits relevant to industrial fermentation should provide the basis for a forward genetics approach for developing better fermenting yeast strains.
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Background: Sugarcane is an important crop worldwide for sugar production and increasingly, as a renewable energy source. Modern cultivars have polyploid, large complex genomes, with highly unequal contributions from ancestral genomes. Long Terminal Repeat retrotransposons (LTR-RTs) are the single largest components of most plant genomes and can substantially impact the genome in many ways. It is therefore crucial to understand their contribution to the genome and transcriptome, however a detailed study of LTR-RTs in sugarcane has not been previously carried out. Results: Sixty complete LTR-RT elements were classified into 35 families within four Copia and three Gypsy lineages. Structurally, within lineages elements were similar, between lineages there were large size differences. FISH analysis resulted in the expected pattern of Gypsy/heterochromatin, Copia/euchromatin, but in two lineages there was localized clustering on some chromosomes. Analysis of related ESTs and RT-PCR showed transcriptional variation between tissues and families. Four distinct patterns were observed in sRNA mapping, the most unusual of which was that of Ale1, with very large numbers of 24nt sRNAs in the coding region. The results presented support the conclusion that distinct small RNA-regulated pathways in sugarcane target the lineages of LTR-RT elements. Conclusions: Individual LTR-RT sugarcane families have distinct structures, and transcriptional and regulatory signatures. Our results indicate that in sugarcane individual LTR-RT families have distinct behaviors and can potentially impact the genome in diverse ways. For instance, these transposable elements may affect nearby genes by generating a diverse set of small RNA's that trigger gene silencing mechanisms. There is also some evidence that ancestral genomes contribute significantly different element numbers from particular LTR-RT lineages to the modern sugarcane cultivar genome.
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Transposable elements (TEs) account for a large portion of plant genomes, particularly in grasses, in which they correspond to 50%-80% of the genomic content. TEs have recently been shown to be a source of new genes and new regulatory networks. The most striking contribution of TEs is referred as "molecular domestication", by which the element coding sequence loses its movement capacity and acquires cellular function. Recently, domesticated transposases known as mustang and derived from the Mutator element have been described in sugarcane. In order to improve our understanding of the function of these proteins, we identified mustang genes from Sorghum bicolor and Zea mays and performed a phenetic analysis to assess the diversity and evolutionary history of this gene family. This analysis identified orthologous groups and showed that mustang genes are highly conserved in grass genomes. We also explored the transcriptional activity of sugarcane mustang genes in heterologous and homologous systems. These genes were found to be ubiquitously transcribed, with shoot apical meristem having the highest expression levels, and were downregulated by phytohormones. Together, these findings suggest the possible involvement of mustang proteins in the maintenance of hormonal homeostasis.
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Summary During the infection of Lepidoptera larvae with baculoviruses the horizontal escape of Tc1-like transposons, termed TCl4.7 and TCp3.2, from the genome of the host Cryptophlebia leucotreta and Cydia pomonella into the genome of Cydia pomonella granulovirus was observed. In this study we addressed the question whether the transposon harboring viruses had a replication advantage over the wild-type and became dominant in the virus population or whether the activity of the host transposable elements is stimulated by virus infection. Biological characterization studies demonstrated that the transposon containing viruses killed C. pomonella larvae slower than CpGV-M. In co-infection experiments of C. pomonella larvae using a mixture of CpGV-M and mutant viruses as inoculum, it was shown that the transposon carrying mutants had a significant selection disadvantage compared to CpGV-M. Transcription levels of the transposase gene of TCp3.2 were investigated in virus infected and uninfected larvae. These experiments demonstrated that a higher level of transposase transcription was detectable in CpGV-M infected than in mock infected control larvae. This observation gave strong evidence that CpGV-M infection might trigger the activity of transposon TCp3.2 within the genome of Cydia pomonella. Our results suggest that the horizontal transfer of insect host transposons into baculovirus genomes might be induced by virus infection.
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Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde ein Bereich aus der geschlechtsbestimmenden Chromosomenregion, der „Contig SDR“, von C. tentans mit einer Größe von ~87 kb untersucht. Zur Erstellung des Contigs wurden 8 BAC-Klone aus C. tentans isoliert, teilweise subkloniert und sequenziert. Innerhalb des Contigs SDR konnten insgesamt 13 Gene sowie ein Teilbereich des Gens rpS5-like im distalen Bereich des Contigs SDR identifiziert werden. Hierbei handelt es sich um dieselben Gene, welche schon im Contig SDR von C. thummi identifiziert werden konnten. Ein Vergleich der beiden Contigs zeigt, dass die Abfolge der Gene zwischen den beiden Arten C. thummi und C. tentans identisch ist. Weiterhin konnten im Contig SDR von C. tentans sechs Bereiche lokalisiert werden, in denen repetitive oder transposable Elemente zu finden sind. Ein Vergleich der larvalen Transkripte (L4-Stadium) von 11 Genen des Contigs SDR aus C. thummi ♂ und C. thummi ♀ per RT-PCR und Hochdurchsatz-Sequenzierung zeigte mit Ausnahme der Gene luc7(p)-like sowie fs(1)K10-like bislang keine weiteren geschlechtsspezifischen Unterschiede. Im Gen luc7(p)-like konnte in C. thummi ♀ und C. piger ♀ ein alternativ gespleißtes Intron im eigentlichen Exon 2 identifiziert werden. Bei fs(1)K10-like konnte in C. thummi ♂ eine Duplikation des Gens nachgewiesen werden. Weiterhin wurden mit Hilfe des RACE-Verfahrens die 5’UTR- und 3’UTR-Bereiche der Transkripte analysiert. Hierdurch konnten differentielle Spleißprodukte identifiziert werden, welche jedoch nicht geschlechtsspezifisch auftreten. Die bioinformatische Bearbeitung der von den Genen der SDR kodierten Proteine auf konservierte Domänen zeigt vier Proteine, die möglicherweise als Transkriptions- oder Spleißfaktoren wirken können. Hierbei handelt es sich um die Proteine der Gene mi-er1-like, luc7(p)-like, polyhomeotic-like sowie rpn5-like. Für das auf Grund der männchenspezifischen Duplikation in C. thummi in den Fokus geratene Genprodukt von fs(1)K10-like konnten keine Domänen vorhergesagt werden. Somit kann nicht gesagt werden, ob das Protein im Rahmen der Geschlechtsdetermination eine Funktion haben könnte. Die Sequenzidentität der abgeleiteten AS-Sequenz liegt für alle Gene außer mi-er1-like (87,6 %) zwischen den beiden Arten C. tentans und C. thummi bei 93,3 %.
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Enterococcus faecium recently evolved from a generally avirulent commensal into a multidrug-resistant health care-associated pathogen causing difficult-to-treat infections, but little is known about the factors responsible for this change. We previously showed that some E. faecium strains express a cell wall-anchored collagen adhesin, Acm. Here we analyzed 90 E. faecium isolates (99% acm(+)) and found that the Acm protein was detected predominantly in clinically derived isolates, while the acm gene was present as a transposon-interrupted pseudogene in 12 of 47 isolates of nonclinical origin. A highly significant association between clinical (versus fecal or food) origin and collagen adherence (P