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1.
Yang G  Weil CF  Wessler SR 《The Plant cell》2006,18(10):2469-2478
The Tc1/mariner transposable element superfamily is widely distributed in animal and plant genomes. However, no active plant element has been previously identified. Nearly identical copies of a rice (Oryza sativa) Tc1/mariner element called Osmar5 in the genome suggested potential activity. Previous studies revealed that Osmar5 encoded a protein that bound specifically to its own ends. In this report, we show that Osmar5 is an active transposable element by demonstrating that expression of its coding sequence in yeast promotes the excision of a nonautonomous Osmar5 element located in a reporter construct. Element excision produces transposon footprints, whereas element reinsertion occurs at TA dinucleotides that were either tightly linked or unlinked to the excision site. Several site-directed mutations in the transposase abolished activity, whereas mutations in the transposase binding site prevented transposition of the nonautonomous element from the reporter construct. This report of an active plant Tc1/mariner in yeast will provide a foundation for future comparative analyses of animal and plant elements in addition to making a new wide host range transposable element available for plant gene tagging.  相似文献   

2.
Unexpected stability of mariner transgenes in Drosophila   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
A number of mariner transformation vectors based on the mauritiana subfamily of transposable elements were introduced into the genome of Drosophila melanogaster and examined for their ability to be mobilized by the mariner transposase. Simple insertion vectors were constructed from single mariner elements into which exogenous DNA ranging in size from 1.3 to 4.5 kb had been inserted; composite vectors were constructed with partial or complete duplications of mariner flanking the exogenous DNA. All of the simple insertion vectors showed levels of somatic and germline excision that were at least 100-fold lower than the baseline level of uninterrupted mariner elements. Although composite vectors with inverted duplications were unable to be mobilized at detectable frequencies, vectors with large direct duplications of mariner could be mobilized. A vector consisting of two virtually complete elements flanking exogenous DNA yielded a frequency of somatic eye-color mosaicism of approximately 10% and a frequency of germline excision of 0.04%. These values are far smaller than those observed for uninterrupted elements. The results imply that efficient mobilization of mariner in vivo requires the presence and proper spacing of sequences internal to the element as well as the inverted repeats.  相似文献   

3.
The Synechocystis sp. PCC6803 insertion sequence ISY100 (ISTcSa) belongs to the Tc1/mariner/IS630 family of transposable elements. ISY100 transposase was purified and shown to promote transposition in vitro. Transposase binds specifically to ISY100 terminal inverted repeat sequences via an N-terminal DNA-binding domain containing two helix-turn-helix motifs. Transposase is the only protein required for excision and integration of ISY100. Transposase made double-strand breaks on a supercoiled DNA molecule containing a mini-ISY100 transposon, cleaving exactly at the transposon 3' ends and two nucleotides inside the 5' ends. Cleavage of short linear substrates containing a single transposon end was less precise. Transposase also catalysed strand transfer, covalently joining the transposon 3' end to the target DNA. When a donor plasmid carrying a mini-ISY100 was incubated with a target plasmid and transposase, the most common products were insertions of one transposon end into the target DNA, but insertions of both ends at a single target site could be recovered after transformation into Escherichia coli. Insertions were almost exclusively into TA dinucleotides, and the target TA was duplicated on insertion. Our results demonstrate that there are no fundamental differences between the transposition mechanisms of IS630 family elements in bacteria and Tc1/mariner elements in higher eukaryotes.  相似文献   

4.
Alternative conformations of a nucleic acid four-way junction   总被引:12,自引:0,他引:12  
Sleeping Beauty (SB), a member of the Tc1/mariner superfamily of transposable elements, is the only active DNA-based transposon system of vertebrate origin that is available for experimental manipulation. We have been using the SB element as a research tool to investigate some of the cis and trans-requirements of element mobilization, and mechanisms that regulate transposition in vertebrate species. In contrast to mariner transposons, which are regulated by overexpression inhibition, the frequency of SB transposition was found to be roughly proportional to the amount of transposase present in cells. Unlike Tc1 and mariner elements, SB contains two binding sites within each of its terminal inverted repeats, and we found that the presence of both of these sites is a strict requirement for mobilization. In addition to the size of the transposon itself, the length as well as sequence of the DNA outside the transposon have significant effects on transposition. As a general rule, the closer the transposon ends are, the more efficient transposition is from a donor molecule. We have found that SB can transform a wide range of vertebrate cells from fish to human. However, the efficiency and precision of transposition varied significantly among cell lines, suggesting potential involvement of host factors in SB transposition. A positive-negative selection assay was devised to enrich populations of cells harboring inserted transposons in their chromosomes. Using this assay, of the order of 10,000 independent transposon insertions can be generated in human cells in a single transfection experiment. Sleeping Beauty can be a powerful alternative to other vectors that are currently used for the production of transgenic animals and for human gene therapy.  相似文献   

5.
The genome of the cyanobacterium Synechocystis sp. strain PCC6803 has nine kinds of insertion sequence (IS) elements, of which ISY100 in 22 copies is the most abundant. A typical ISY100 member is 947 bp long and has imperfect terminal inverted repeat sequences. It has an open reading frame encoding a 282-amino-acid protein that appears to have partial homology with the transposase encoded by a bacterial IS, IS630, indicating that ISY100 belongs to the IS630 family. To determine whether ISY100 has transposition ability, we constructed a plasmid carrying the IPTG (isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside)-inducible transposase gene at one site and mini-ISY100 with the chloramphenicol resistance gene, substituted for the transposase gene of ISY100, at another site and introduced the plasmid into an Escherichia coli strain already harboring a target plasmid. Mini-ISY100 transposed to the target plasmid in the presence of IPTG at a very high frequency. Mini-ISY100 was inserted into the TA sequence and duplicated it upon transposition, as do IS630 family elements. Moreover, the mini-ISY100-carrying plasmid produced linear molecules of mini-ISY100 with the exact 3' ends of ISY100 and 5' ends lacking two nucleotides of the ISY100 sequence. No bacterial insertion elements have been shown to generate such molecules, whereas the eukaryotic Tc1/mariner family elements, Tc1 and Tc3, which transpose to the TA sequence, have. These findings suggest that ISY100 transposes to a new site through the formation of linear molecules, such as Tc1 and Tc3, by excision. Some Tc1/mariner family elements leave a footprint with an extra sequence at the site of excision. No footprints, however, were detected in the case of ISY100, suggesting that eukaryotes have a system that repairs a double strand break at the site of excision by an end-joining reaction, in which the gap is filled with a sequence of several base pairs, whereas prokaryotes do not have such a system. ISY100 transposes in E. coli, indicating that it transposes without any host factor other than the transposase encoded by itself. Therefore, it may be able to transpose in other biological systems.  相似文献   

6.
Mutator-like transposable elements (MULEs) are widespread in plants and are well known for their high transposition activity as well as their ability to duplicate and amplify host gene fragments. Despite their abundance and importance, few active MULEs have been identified. In this study, we demonstrated that a rice (Oryza sativa) MULE, Os3378, is capable of excising and reinserting in yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae), suggesting that yeast harbors all the host factors for the transposition of MULEs. The transposition activity induced by the wild-type transposase is low but can be altered by modification of the transposase sequence, including deletion, fusion, and substitution. Particularly, fusion of a fluorescent protein to the transposase enhanced the transposition activity, representing another approach to manipulate transposases. Moreover, we identified a critical region in the transposase where the net charge of the amino acids seems to be important for activity. Finally, transposition efficiency is also influenced by the element and its flanking sequences (i.e., small elements are more competent than their large counterparts). Perfect target site duplication is favorable, but not required, for precise excision. In addition to the potential application in functional genomics, this study provides the foundation for further studies of the transposition mechanism of MULEs.  相似文献   

7.
A. R. Lohe  D. L. Hartl 《Genetics》1996,143(3):1299-1306
Germline mobilization of the transposable element mariner is severely inhibited by the insertion of a 4.5- to 11.9-kb fragment of exogenous DNA into a unique SacI site approximately in the middle of the 1286-bp element. In the presence of transposase driven by the germline-specific hsp26-sgs3 promoter, mobilization of the MlwB construct (containing a 11.9-kb insertion) is detected at low frequency. Analysis of a mobilized MlwB element indicated that mobilization is mediated by the mariner transposase. However, transposed MlwB elements are also defective in germline mobilization. Rare, transposase-induced germ-line excision events were also recovered for such vectors. The estimated rate of excision is <0.1% per chromosome per generation. Excision appears to be accompanied by gap repair if a suitable template is available. The data imply that the reduced mobility of mariner vectors with exogenous DNA in the SacI site results from disruption of sequences necessary for efficient mobilization. The relative stability may be a valuable property in the uses of mariner-like elements in genetic engineering of insects of economic importance.  相似文献   

8.
The Tc3 Family of Transposable Genetic Elements in Caenorhabditis Elegans   总被引:14,自引:2,他引:12  
J. Collins  E. Forbes    P. Anderson 《Genetics》1989,121(1):47-55
We describe genetic and molecular properties of Tc3, a family of transposable elements in Caenorhabditis elegans. About 15 Tc3 elements are present in the genomes of several different wild-type varieties of C. elegans, but Tc3 transposition and excision are not detected in these strains. Tc3 transposition and excision occur at high frequencies, however, in strain TR679, a mutant identified because of its highly active Tc1 elements. In TR679, Tc3 is responsible for several spontaneous mutations affecting the unc-22 gene. Tc3-induced mutations are unstable, and revertants result from precise or nearly precise excision of Tc3. Although Tc3 is very active in TR679, it is not detectably active in several other mutator mutants, all of which exhibit high levels of Tc1 activity. Tc3 is 2.5 kilobases long, and except for sequences near its inverted repeat termini, it is unrelated to Tc1. The termini of Tc3 are inverted repeats of at least 70 base pairs; the terminal 8 nucleotides of Tc3 are identical to 8 of the terminal 9 nucleotides of Tc1.  相似文献   

9.
Mariner-like elements are widespread eukaryotic transposons, but Mos-1 is the only natural element that is known to be active. Little is known about the biochemistry of mariner transposition. The first step in the process is the binding of the transposase to the 5' and 3' inverted terminal repeats (ITRs) of the element. Using the 3' ITR of the element, we have determined the binding properties of a recombinant Mos-1 transposase produced in bacteria, and we have used deletion derivatives to localize the minimal ITR binding domain between amino acids 1 and 141. Its features and structure indicate that it differs from the ITR binding domain of the transposase encoded by Tc1-related elements.  相似文献   

10.
Michel K  O'Brochta DA  Atkinson PW 《Gene》2002,298(2):141-146
Donor cleavage and strand transfer are two functions performed by transposases during transposition of class II transposable elements. Within transposable elements, the only active center described, to date, facilitating both functions, is the so-called DDE motif. A second motif, R-K-H/K-R-H/W-Y, is found in the site-specific recombinases of the tyrosine recombinase family. While present in many bacterial insertion sequences as well as in the eukaryotic family of mariner/Tc1 elements, the DDE motif was considered absent in other classes of eukaryotic class II elements such as P, and hAT and piggyBac. Based on sequence alignments of a hobo-like element from the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, to a variety of other hAT transposases and several members of the mariner/Tc1 group, Bigot et al. [Gene 174 (1996) 265] proposed the presence of a DSE motif in hAT transposases. In the present study we tested if each of these three residues is required for transposition of the Hermes element, a member of the hAT family commonly used for insect transformation. While D402N and E572Q mutations lead to knock-out of Hermes function, mutations S535A and S535D did not affect transposition frequency or the choice of integration sites. These data give the first experimental support that D402 and E572 are indeed required for transposition of Hermes. Furthermore, this study indicates that the active center of the Hermes transposase differs from the proposed DSE motif. It remains to be shown if other residues also form the active site of this transposase.  相似文献   

11.
P elements, like mariners, inhabit eukaryotic genomes and transpose via a DNA intermediate. Mutant and wild-type elements in the same genome should be transposed with equal probability by trans-acting transposase, and so no selection should counteract the accumulation of inactivating mutations in transposase genes. Thus, copies of mariner elements diverge within a host species under no selection (Robertson and Lampe 1995). It is unknown whether or not this pattern holds for P elements, which are unrelated to mariner elements but share the same life history. Publicly available P-element sequences were analyzed for evidence of conservative selection for the function of P-element-encoded proteins. Results were compared to predictions derived from several hypotheses that could explain selection, or the lack of it. P-element protein-coding sequences do evolve under conservative selection but apparently because of more than one selective force. Of the four exons in the P-element transposase, the first three (exons 0, 1, and 2) can be translated alone into a repressor of transposition, while the last (exon 3) is only expressed as part of the full-length transposase and probably serves a transposition-specific role. As full-length P-element copies diverge from each other within a host population, selection maintains exons 0-2 but apparently not exon 3. The selection acting on exons 0-2 may act at the host level for repression of transposition (since host level selection does act on orthologous truncated elements that contain only exons 0-2). Evidence of selection on exon 3 is only found in comparisons of more diverged elements from different species, suggesting that selection for transposition acts primarily at horizontal transfer events. Thus, horizontal transfer events may be the sole source of the selection that is crucial to the maintenance of autonomous P elements in the face of mutation (as suggested by Robertson and Lampe 1995). The predictions derived here suggest a strategy for collecting sequence data that could definitively answer these questions.  相似文献   

12.
We investigated the ability of the transposable element Tc1 to excise from the genome of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans var. Bristol N2. Our results show that in the standard lab strain (Bristol), Tc1 excision occurred at a high frequency, comparable to that seen in the closely related Bergerac strain BO. We examined excision in the following way. We used a unique sequence flanking probe (pCeh29) to investigate the excision of Tc1s situated in the same location in both strains. Evidence of high-frequency excision from the genomes of both strains was observed. The Tc1s used in the first approach, although present in the same location in both genomes, were not known to be identical. Thus, a second approach was taken, which involved the genetic manipulation of a BO variant, Tc1(Hin). The ability of this BO Tc1(Hin) to excise was retained after its introduction into the N2 genome. Thus, we conclude that excision of Tc1 from the Bristol genome occurs at a high frequency and is comparable to that of Tc1 excision from the Bergerac genome. We showed that many Tc1 elements in N2 were apparently functionally intact and were capable of somatic excision. Even so, N2 Tc1s were prevented from exhibiting the high level of heritable transposition displayed by BO elements. We suggest that Bristol Tc1 elements have the ability to transpose but that transposition is heavily repressed in the gonadal tissue.  相似文献   

13.
We present the crystal structure of the catalytic domain of Mos1 transposase, a member of the Tc1/mariner family of transposases. The structure comprises an RNase H-like core, bringing together an aspartic acid triad to form the active site, capped by N- and C-terminal alpha-helices. We have solved structures with either one Mg2+ or two Mn2+ ions in the active site, consistent with a two-metal mechanism for catalysis. The lack of hairpin-stabilizing structural motifs is consistent with the absence of a hairpin intermediate in Mos1 excision. We have built a model for the DNA-binding domain of Mos1 transposase, based on the structure of the bipartite DNA-binding domain of Tc3 transposase. Combining this with the crystal structure of the catalytic domain provides a model for the paired-end complex formed between a dimer of Mos1 transposase and inverted repeat DNA. The implications for the mechanisms of first and second strand cleavage are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
Mos1 and other mariner/Tc1 transposons move horizontally during evolution, and when transplanted into heterologous species can transpose in organisms ranging from prokaryotes to protozoans and vertebrates. To further develop the Drosophila Mos1 mariner system as a genetic tool and to probe mechanisms affecting the regulation of transposition activity, we developed an in vitro system for Mos1 transposition using purified transposase and selectable Mos1 derivatives. Transposition frequencies of nearly 10–3/target DNA molecule were obtained, and insertions occurred at TA dinucleotides with little other sequence specificity. Mos1 elements containing only the 28 bp terminal inverted repeats were inactive in vitro, while elements containing a few additional internal bases were fully active, establishing the minimal cis-acting requirements for transposition. With increasing transposase the transposition frequency increased to a plateau value, in contrast to the predictions of the protein overexpression inhibition model and to that found recently with a reconstructed Himar1 transposase. This difference between the ‘natural’ Mos1 and ‘reconstructed’ Himar1 transposases suggests an evolutionary path for down-regulation of mariner transposition following its introduction into a naïve population. The establishment of the cis and trans requirements for optimal mariner transposition in vitro provides key data for the creation of vectors for in vitro mutagenesis, and will facilitate the development of in vivo systems for mariner transposition.  相似文献   

15.
During cut-and-paste mariner/Tc1 transposition, transposon DNA is cut precisely at its junction with flanking DNA, ensuring the transposon is neither shortened nor lengthened with each transposition event. Each transposon end is flanked by a TpA dinucleotide: the signature target site duplication of mariner/Tc1 transposition. To establish the role of this sequence in accurate DNA cleavage, we have determined the crystal structure of a pre-second strand cleavage mariner Mos1 transpososome. The structure reveals the route of an intact DNA strand through the transposase active site before second strand cleavage. The crossed architecture of this pre-second strand cleavage paired-end complex supports our proposal that second strand cleavage occurs in trans. The conserved mariner transposase WVPHEL and YSPDL motifs position the strand for accurate DNA cleavage. Base-specific recognition of the flanking DNA by conserved amino acids is revealed, defining a new role for the WVPHEL motif in mariner transposition and providing a molecular explanation for in vitro mutagenesis data. Comparison of the pre-TS cleavage and post-cleavage Mos1 transpososomes with structures of Prototype Foamy Virus intasomes suggests a binding mode for target DNA prior to Mos1 transposon integration.  相似文献   

16.
Aberrant repair products of mariner transposition occur at a frequency of approximately 1/500 per target element per generation. Among 100 such mutations in the nonautonomous element peach, most had aberrations in the 5' end of peach (40 alleles), in the 3' end of peach (11 alleles), or a deletion of peach with or without deletion of flanking genomic DNA (29 alleles). Most mariner mutations can be explained by exonuclease "nibble" and host-mediated repair of the double-stranded gap created by the transposase, in contrast to analogous mutations in the P element. In mariner, mutations in the 5' inverted repeat are smaller and more frequent than those in the 3' inverted repeat, but secondary mutations in target elements with a 5' lesion usually had 3' lesions resembling those normally found at the 5' end. We suggest that the mariner transposase distinguishes between the 5' and 3' ends of the element, and that the 5' end is relatively more protected after strand scission. We also find: (1) that homolog-dependent gap repair is a frequent accompaniment to mariner excision, estimated as 30% of all excision events; and (2) that mariner is a hotspot of recombination in Drosophila females, but only in the presence of functional transposase.  相似文献   

17.
Mobile elements are widely present in eukaryotic genomes. They are repeated DNA segments that are able to move from one locus to another within the genome. They are divided into two main categories, depending on their mechanism of transposition, involving RNA (class I) or DNA (class II) molecules. The mariner-like elements are class II transposons. They encode their own transposase, which is necessary and sufficient for transposition in the absence of host factors. They are flanked by a short inverted terminal repeat and a TA dinucleotide target site, which is duplicated upon insertion. The transposase consists of two domains, an N-terminal inverted terminal repeat binding domain and a C-terminal catalytic domain. We identified a transposable element with molecular characteristics of a mariner-like element in Atta sexdens rubropilosa genome. Identification started from a PCR with degenerate primers and queen genomic DNA templates, with which it was possible to amplify a fragment with mariner transposable-element homology. Phylogenetic analysis demonstrated that this element belongs to the mauritiana subfamily of mariner-like elements and it was named Asmar1. We found that Asmar1 is homologous to a transposon described from another ant, Messor bouvieri. The predicted transposase sequence demonstrated that Asmar1 has a truncated transposase ORF. This study is part of a molecular characterization of mobile elements in the Atta spp genome. Our finding of mariner-like elements in all castes of this ant could be useful to help understand the dynamics of mariner-like element distribution in the Hymenoptera.  相似文献   

18.
Mariners are a large family of eukaryotic DNA-mediated transposable elements that move via a cut-and-paste mechanism. Several features of the evolutionary history of mariners are unusual. First, they appear to undergo horizontal transfer commonly between species on an evolutionary timescale. They can do this because they are able to transpose using only their own self-encoded transposase and not host-specific factors. One consequence of this phenomenon is that more than one kind of mariner can be present in the same genome. We hypothesized that two mariners occupying the same genome would not interact. We tested the limits of mariner interactions using an in vitro transposition system, purified mariner transposases, and DNAse I footprinting. Only mariner elements that were very closely related to each other (ca. 84% identity) cross-mobilized, and then inefficiently. Because of the dramatic suppression of transposition between closely related elements, we propose that to isolate elements functionally, only minor changes might be necessary between elements, in both inverted terminal repeat and amino acid sequence. We further propose a mechanism to explain mariner diversification based on this phenomenon.  相似文献   

19.
Genomic plasticity mediated by transposable elements can have a dramatic impact on genome integrity. To minimize its genotoxic effects, it is tightly regulated either by intrinsic mechanisms (linked to the element itself) or by host-mediated mechanisms. Using mass spectrometry, we show here for the first time that MOS1, the transposase driving the mobility of the mariner Mos1 element, is phosphorylated. We also show that the transposition activity of MOS1 is downregulated by protein kinase AMP cyclic-dependent phosphorylation at S170, which renders the transposase unable to promote Mos1 transposition. One step in the transposition cycle, the assembly of the paired-end complex, is specifically inhibited. At the cellular level, we provide evidence that phosphorylation at S170 prevents the active transport of the transposase into the nucleus. Our data suggest that protein kinase AMP cyclic-dependent phosphorylation may play a double role in the early stages of genome invasion by mariner elements.  相似文献   

20.
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