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The evolution of long interspersed repeated DNA (L1, LINE 1) as revealed by the analysis of an ancient rodent L1 DNA family
Authors:Esterina Pascale  Christine Liu  Eulalia Valle  Karen Usdin  Anthony V. Furano
Affiliation:(1) Section on Genomic Structure and Function, Laboratory of Biochemical Pharmacology, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Building 8, Room 203, 20892 Bethesda, MD, USA;(2) Present address: Cattedra di Chimica e Microscopia Clinica, Universita degli Studi, L'Aquila, Italy;(3) Present address: Columbia University, 10027 New York, NY, USA;(4) Present address: Department of Functional Biology, Faculty of Medicine, c/Julian Claveria S/N, 33071 Oviedo, Spain
Abstract:Summary All modern mammals contain a distinctive, highly repeated (⩾50,000 members) family of long interspersed repeated DNA called the L1 (LINE 1) family. While the modern L1 families were derived from a common ancestor that predated the mammalian radiation ∼80 million years ago, most of the members of these families were generated within the last 5 million years. However, recently we demonstrated that modern murine (Old World rats and mice) genomes share an older long interspersed repeated DNA family that we called Lx. Here we report our analysis of the DNA sequence of Lx family members and the relationship of this family to the modern L1 families in mouse and rat. The extent of DNA sequence divergence between Lx members indicates that the Lx amplification occurred about 12 million years ago, around the time of the murine radiation. Parsimony analysis revealed that Lx elements were ancestral to both the modern rat and mouse L1 families. However, we found that few if any of the evolutionary intermediates between the Lx and the modern L1 families were extensively amplified. Because the modern L1 families have evolved under selective pressure, the evolutionary intermediates must have been capable of replication. Therefore, replicationcompetent L1 elements can reside in genomes without undergoing extensive amplification. We discuss the bearing of our findings on the evolution of L1 DNA elements and the mammalian genome.
Keywords:L1 family evolution  LINE family  Long interspersed repeated DNA  Ancient L1 family  L1 family amplification
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