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Evolution of the transposable element mariner in the Drosophila melanogaster species group
Authors:P. Capy  J. R. David  D. L. Hartl
Affiliation:(1) Laboratoire de Biologie et Génétique Evolutives, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, 91198 Gif/Yvette Cedex, France;(2) Department of Genetics, Washington University School of Medicine, Box 8232, 63110 St Louis, MO, USA
Abstract:The population biology and molecular evolution of the transposable element mariner has been studied in the eight species of the melanogaster subgroup of the Drosophila subgenus Sophophora. The element occurs in D. simulans, D. mauritiana, D. sechellia, D. teissieri, and D. yakuba, but is not found in D. melanogaster, D. erecta, or D. orena. Sequence comparisons suggest that the mariner element was present in the ancestor of the species subgroup and was lost in some of the lineages. Most species contain both active and inactive mariner elements. A deletion of most of the 3prime end characterizes many elements in D. teissieri, but in other species the inactive elements differ from active ones only by simple nucleotide substitutions or small additions/deletions. Active mariner elements from all species are quite similar in nucleotide sequence, although there are some-species-specific differences. Many, but not all, of the inactive elements are also quite closely related. The genome of D. mauritiana contains 20–30 copies of mariner, that of D. simulans 0–10, and that of D. sechellia only two copies (at fixed positions in the genome). The mariner situation in D. sechellia may reflect a reduced effective population size owing to the restricted geographical range of this species and its ecological specialization to the fruit of Morinda citrifolia.
Keywords:Mariner  Drosophila  molecular evolution  transposable element
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